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Too Much Primer ...... What now?

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hilbilby

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Hi folks,

I've just bottled my first ever brew (from tin of Coopers Pils) and went a little overboard on priming sugar for some of this batch.

In playing around with with a couple of different bottles sizes and priming sugars ......... I'm concerned about having used too much dextrose / Corn Syup / DME in some of my Grolschies.

I've incorrectly (not sure how i managed it) used 1/2 tbsp (around 1.5 tsp or 6.3gm) for many of my 500ml bottles. I see on some of these forums that many people recommend 1/2 to 1/3 of that ........ whoops!

Hopefully I'm not in bottle bomb territory ....... (however am a little nervy all the same).

I've been reading up a bit (post bottling) once I'd realised what I'd done, and discovered that depending on the desired carbonation for the style of beer and the type sugar/s used (with DME the most forgiving), the beers in question may be okay.

I see (working backwards using charts) here < http://www.brewersfriend.com/beer-priming-calculator/ and here http://webspace.webring.com/people/ms/sirleslie/AlcoholChart/PrimingCalculator.html > that the dextrose / corn syrup beers fermented at 22 deg C @ 6.3 gm / 500ml would be predicted to carbonate to 3.7 - 3.9 volumes of dissolved C02 and the DME 2.6 - 3.0 volumes of dissolved C02.

I don't mind a bit of fizz in my beer, however am keen to keep them (safely) in one piece .......... here is my plan for any comment / advice.

1) store suspect bottles (all labelled) in a box lined with a plastic bin bag tied at top in case of a blow out

2) after 2 weeks refrigerate bottles from 1) and drink first whilst the others (with less sugar) run their natural course

Any thoughts?
 
seems ok to me, esp the plastic bagging part...lol! grolsch bottles are great and what i use. i have read that they can hokd an upwards of around 7 carb. dont know if this is true, but criss your fingers and know those bottles are hefty. did u use grolsch bottles for all the brew?
 
grolsch bottles should be able to handle all that pressure so i think you're safe from bombs.

3.7 - 3.9 vols is really high. unless you made a belgian style, you're going to have over-carb'ed beer. not the end of the world but will really change the character of your beer.

since you used swing-top grolsch bottles, you could experiment with venting the bottles: un-seal the bottle as little as possible until you hear a hiss, wait a second for the pressure to be released, then re-seal. wait 24 hours, then refrigerate, then taste. if it's still too fizzy, repeat.

i had some brett'ed beer that got way too carbonated in the bottle. i had to vent each one 5 or 6 times before they got down to an enjoyable level of carbonation.
 
thanks pfredop and sweetcell :) that is encouraging.

All of the over-primed beers are in Grolsch Swing tops (thankfully)

I like the idea of 'ventilating' ............. is that something i'd consider starting around the 5 day mark? Perhaps repeat a couple more times with a 24 - 48 hr break in between?

If a happy carbonation level is achieved in first week or so, is the residual sugar likely to change the flavour of the beer much? Not too bothered, just curious.

BTW - I call the plastic eski bags (Bomb Shelters) :)
 
FTR I also made it a deliberately light (around 2.6%) beer as with x4 boys i often need to be able to drive at a moments notice, I'm hoping that a higher carb lighter style beer might actually not be too bad :)
 
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