Hi everyone,
just found this amazing forum - what a great resource! Anyway, I've always wondered what happens during bottle conditioning once the yeast has already created an adequate amount of CO2. I've heard that too much bottle conditioning makes bottles explode unless you refrigitate them at the proper time. But what occurs inside the bottle during this stage to make the yeast stop producing too much carbonation? And why can you store these bottles at room temp. after a short refrigiration process and not have them explode? I'm guessing enzyme kinetics is somehow involved but that's just a wild guess.
Thanks
just found this amazing forum - what a great resource! Anyway, I've always wondered what happens during bottle conditioning once the yeast has already created an adequate amount of CO2. I've heard that too much bottle conditioning makes bottles explode unless you refrigitate them at the proper time. But what occurs inside the bottle during this stage to make the yeast stop producing too much carbonation? And why can you store these bottles at room temp. after a short refrigiration process and not have them explode? I'm guessing enzyme kinetics is somehow involved but that's just a wild guess.
Thanks