jnesselrode
Well-Known Member
Oh, and looking back at things I see I underprimed based on the recipe I was working from, dang it! It was supposed to be 3 tablespoons, not teaspoons. Anyhoo -- any feedback appreciated.
who has not mixed up those to measurements to many times to count?Oh, and looking back at things I see I underprimed based on the recipe I was working from, dang it! It was supposed to be 3 tablespoons, not teaspoons. Anyhoo -- any feedback appreciated.
And, then there's the possibility I did use tablespoons but wrote down teaspoons.who has not mixed up those to measurements to many times to count?
Thanks for the detailed reply, @Chalkyt !Re your question from last Saturday. Hmm... teaspoons or tablespoons?
I generally work on two gravity points of fermentation resulting in one volume of C02. This isn't terribly precise, but for me it doesn't matter if my cider has 2 or 2.5 volumes of carbonation. This sort of fizz is good enough for me.
If you want some background to this, Alex Simmens of Llanblethian Orchards in Wales has written an excellent "Bottle Conditioned Cider Guide" which goes through the relevant arithmetic. A Google search should find it.
So back to the question. Using this approach, a gallon of cider (say 4 litres) at SG1.000 with 3 teaspoons of sugar (say 15 grams at 5 grams per teaspoon) added will have about 4g/L of added sugar for a SG of 1.0025, i.e. when the sugar is fermented it should end up a little flat with a slight fizz at one and a bit volumes of C02.
A gallon at 1.002 should have about 3g/L of sugar left, plus the 3 teaspoons of added sugar so should end up at 7g/L of sugar for a SG of around 1.004, which ferments into a nice fizz of two or a bit more volumes of C02. i.e no potential bottle bomb issues here.
On the other hand, 3 tablespoons of sugar is around 12 g/L or SG 1.007 so when added to the SG1.000 you could have up to 4 volumes of C02 which IME is getting into volcano territory. (I currently have a batch in crown capped bottles which I pasteurised too late and is at 4 volumes... it needs about 5 minutes with the crown cap just slightly released to become drinkable otherwise cider sprays all over the place!).
Adding 3 tablespoons of sugar to the SG1.002 cider could get you up towards 7 or 8 volumes of C02 if it ferments completely dry (i.e. no pasteurising), which is definitely "worry" country if the bottles aren't strong enough. How long has it been carbonating? Might be time to open a bottle to see what is going on.
Yes, these little issues make cidermaking an adventure!
Edit: I probably should have mentioned that sections 2 and 3 of Alex's guide are the most relevant to this issue although the rest is also valuable and includes "how to do it" stuff.
I just use the brewers friend priming sugar calculator, which never failed me. Just google it, it's free!Trying to get to sugar grams per gallon for 2.5 volumes CO2.
Hoping to have my math checked after working through the formulas here.
1 gallon = 3.78 liters
Density CO2 = 1.977 grams/L
CO2 grams = 2.5 CO2 vol x (1.977 * 3.78 L) = 18.68 grams CO2 per gallon
Sugar grams = CO2 grams * 2.128
18.68 * 2.128 = 39.75 grams sugar per gallon (or 10.52 g/L)
So assuming 1.000 final SG, addition of ~ 40 grams sugar to a gallon batch should ferment back down to ~ 1.000 and have 2.5 vols CO2.
SG increase = ((39.75/3.8)/2.7) = 3.87 * 0.001 = 0.0038
Thanks! Using that for 1 gallon, 2.5 volumes I get 0.9 ounces or 25.5 grams. Pretty different than my 39.75 grams. Hopefully Professor @Chalkyt can help. I've got a spreadsheet where I do various calcs/recipes and would like to drop this in there if possible.I just use the brewers friend priming sugar calculator, which never failed me. Just google it, it's free!
All I can say is that the calculator never failed me in years and that the following quote also matches my experiences. Only thing I'd slightly lower would be the English ale, Which I would put in the 1.5 to 2.5 g/l range, while preferring 2.0g/l.Thanks! Using that for 1 gallon, 2.5 volumes I get 0.9 ounces or 25.5 grams. Pretty different than my 39.75 grams. Hopefully Professor @Chalkyt can help. I've got a spreadsheet where I do various calcs/recipes and would like to drop this in there if possible.
I don't use fancy calculation tool for that, just use metric system and experience.
12g/l : High Champagne carbonation level (for heavy "Champenoise" bottle only with cork stopper + crown)
8g/l-10g/l : High to very high carbonated beer level (Belgian strong beer)
7g/l : classic beer carbonation level (Lager, IPA,...)
5g/l : low carbonation level (stout, english Ale,...)
<5g/l : fizzy beverage
Pick the number you want and multiply it by 3.78 and you have your gram/gallon target.
Of course this works only if your juice if fully fermented before you add the suger.