mrgoodcheese
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- Feb 5, 2009
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Hello, and thank you ahead of time for any info.
My question is concerning yeast and eventual carbonation, resulting from racking.
When you rack from the secondary carboy to the bottling bucket, do you try to leave all/most of the sediment behind? Or should the yeast in that sediment be stirred into the beer /suspended back in the beer prior to racking, so that carbonation in the bottle happens properly (with the addition of corn surgar of course)?
The reason I ask is because the last 2 batches I made (Scottish Wee Heavey 4 weeks ago, Carribou Slobber several months ago) had extremely weak carbonation, with little to no head. Both of those batches I was very careful to not rack the sediment from the secondary. I'm about to bottle my honey kolsch, and I really would like to have some proper carbonation this time.
My question is concerning yeast and eventual carbonation, resulting from racking.
When you rack from the secondary carboy to the bottling bucket, do you try to leave all/most of the sediment behind? Or should the yeast in that sediment be stirred into the beer /suspended back in the beer prior to racking, so that carbonation in the bottle happens properly (with the addition of corn surgar of course)?
The reason I ask is because the last 2 batches I made (Scottish Wee Heavey 4 weeks ago, Carribou Slobber several months ago) had extremely weak carbonation, with little to no head. Both of those batches I was very careful to not rack the sediment from the secondary. I'm about to bottle my honey kolsch, and I really would like to have some proper carbonation this time.