Hellooo,
So, once again, I have created an overcarbed beer. It's particularly frustrating because I thought I followed all the rules this time - I made sure my beer was fully attenuated, took careful gravity readings, added the correct amount of priming sugar for the style, and adequately mixed it into the beer in the bottling bucket.
It is a California Common, OG 1.061 (my recipe had me at 1.068 OG est. with 75% efficiency), and I let it go in the primary for 2 weeks, and secondary for a MONTH before I bottled it. When I bottled it, its final gravity was 1.015 - which was pretty much on target with the estimated FG of 1.017 (although, since my OG was lower, perhaps it should have attenuated even lower?)
Irrespective, I bottled the beer with 1oz priming sugar/gallon of beer, for a target of 2.6 volumes of CO2, which is a decent amount of carbonation, but definitely to style if I'm not mistaken.
Three weeks later, and for about three weeks after that the carbonation level was PERFECT - a nice, foamy spritzy head, and the beer was deliciously hoppy and refreshing.
However, sometime in the past three weeks or so, the yeast in the bottle must have continued to chomp away at the residual sugars, because every bottle I've opened lately has foamed out so much that you can't even drink it out of the bottle anymore. A gentle pour into a glass can alleviate the issue to a degree, but if left to its own devices, roughly 1/3 to 1/2 of the beer foams out.
TL;DR: My main question is, what did I do wrong? We've certainly had a heat wave here in the Northeast, although my basement ambient temperatures are fairly constant in the upper 60s-low 70s on a really bad day. Do spritzier beers, such as Cal commons, need to be stored cold in the summer? I say this because my other brews have been fine, including a honey nut brown ale that attenuated at roughly the same FG.
Thanks
So, once again, I have created an overcarbed beer. It's particularly frustrating because I thought I followed all the rules this time - I made sure my beer was fully attenuated, took careful gravity readings, added the correct amount of priming sugar for the style, and adequately mixed it into the beer in the bottling bucket.
It is a California Common, OG 1.061 (my recipe had me at 1.068 OG est. with 75% efficiency), and I let it go in the primary for 2 weeks, and secondary for a MONTH before I bottled it. When I bottled it, its final gravity was 1.015 - which was pretty much on target with the estimated FG of 1.017 (although, since my OG was lower, perhaps it should have attenuated even lower?)
Irrespective, I bottled the beer with 1oz priming sugar/gallon of beer, for a target of 2.6 volumes of CO2, which is a decent amount of carbonation, but definitely to style if I'm not mistaken.
Three weeks later, and for about three weeks after that the carbonation level was PERFECT - a nice, foamy spritzy head, and the beer was deliciously hoppy and refreshing.
However, sometime in the past three weeks or so, the yeast in the bottle must have continued to chomp away at the residual sugars, because every bottle I've opened lately has foamed out so much that you can't even drink it out of the bottle anymore. A gentle pour into a glass can alleviate the issue to a degree, but if left to its own devices, roughly 1/3 to 1/2 of the beer foams out.
TL;DR: My main question is, what did I do wrong? We've certainly had a heat wave here in the Northeast, although my basement ambient temperatures are fairly constant in the upper 60s-low 70s on a really bad day. Do spritzier beers, such as Cal commons, need to be stored cold in the summer? I say this because my other brews have been fine, including a honey nut brown ale that attenuated at roughly the same FG.
Thanks