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Priming sugar for Double Oat IPA

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dude1

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I'm about to try to clone a "Double Oat IPA" made by a local brewery that I find amazing.

They told me they use 40% flaked oats in the grain bill and also some maltodextrin (probably at the recommended rate of 25g/L).

Given this high amount of flaked oats, I'm afraid I might end up with too much head.

I usually prim with 4 to 4.5g table sugar per L for beers with no flakes but about 10% Carapils and that gives me a "careful" head = not much, but no risk.

Would you say I should dial down my priming sugar to compensate the potential higher head generated by the flaked oats or maybe not change anything?
If yes, how much would you recommend?

Thanks
 
Last edited:
Oats are kind of head retention-negative, so don't worry about too much head. You'll not get it. Moreover, your grain bill does not have an impact on the amount/level of actual carbonation in the beer. Carbonation is a direct effect of refermentation with sugar, speisse and/or CO2 force carbonation. Head retention is another story. That's a malt/mash dependent thing for the most part.

Maltodextrin helps with the body of the beer. Has no other effect whatsoever.

4 to 4.5 gr of sugar per liter is on the low end for cabonation. That's about 2 vol CO2, so almost flat for my personal taste. I usually use between 6 and 8.5 gr sugar per liter, depending on the beer style.

But I agree with Pkrd: there's no such thing as too much head. :)
 
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