tennesseean_87
Well-Known Member
+1 for 72. I need to find a cheap corker. Anyone want to give me their colonna?
NTexBrewer said:I too will be bottling my triple this friday. I will bottle in 750ml belgian bottles with corks plus a few 33cl chimey, duval, and other belgian beers I have drunk. http://www.northernbrewer.com/documentation/AdvancedBottleConditioning.pdf Here is a link that talks about how many volumes bottles are rated for. Regarding CO2 in the beer. If I understand it correctly you use the warmest temperature your beer has been at. So if you fermented at 72 then you use 72. The thinking is as you chill or cold crash your beer the CO2 stays in suspension in the beer. I guess I'm leaning to carbonate mine at 3.5 volumes. I have carbonated saisons to 3.2 and wits to 3.0 and this has been good carbonation. I'm also planning to pitch new yeast at bottling. I may not get the cork pop like a commercial tripel but I don't want gushers either since these will be Christmas presents for friends.
tennesseean_87 said:+1 for 72. I need to find a cheap corker. Anyone want to give me their colonna?
Yesterday I bottled the two big Belgians sitting in primary. One with 1762 and one with 3787, both at around 10.5% ABV. Decided not to give them any more yeast so we shall see. Made a priming syrup from cane sugar, tangerine rind, tangerine juice and some organic molasses. Ended up with close to 5 oz. dry sugar/ 8 oz. syrup for each 4 gallonish batch. Boiled it up to about 250 F then let sit in oven at 280 for 45 mins.
One thing I do now, for better or worse, is not only stir up the beer being racked over the priming syrup, but right before bottling give it a good shake. My rationale is that residual CO2 gets shaken out, and maybe the yeast need a little Oxygen in their next fermentation phase. The other thing is to really get the beer and the much heavier priming syrup mixed in really well.
I am using Oxygen scavenging caps so figure if I did shake in a little O2 it will be eaten by the yeast or absorbed by the cap.
Getting ready to mail a bunch out for Christmas. Just popped my first one after 3 weeks of carbonating at 78 degrees. Wanted to make sure I was not sending out bottle bombs. Looks like the carbonation level is perfect. Tastes great too!
I know it's only been a couple of months. But interested to see any results. It's an awesome beerTrickyDick said:I'm bottling mine tomorrow... I mean it this time too! Thinking 3.0 volumes will be good. A part of me want to go 3.5, but I don't have enough belgian style bottles to handle the higher pressures. Drank my last Dubbel brew again yesterday and I think it is finally ready. I brewed it in March and at 6 months tasting it wasn't there yet. I agree on the Darker belgian styles improving with age. Never had a fresh triple before, so am looking forward to it. TD
I know it's only been a couple of months. But interested to see any results. It's an awesome beer
Also, 3.0 or 3.5 volumes?
TD
I'm botteling my tripel tomorrow and was wondering the same thing. What did you end up doing?
-Mike
Just finished bottling. Decided to carb to 3.75 volumes. Using NB priming calculated that was 6.5 oz. of sucrose for 4.5 gallons at 72 degrees. I used beet sugar to prime. I also pitched one pack of wyeast 3787. Smacked it when I got up this morning (boy that sounds bad). The yeast pack had about 5 hours to activate. Not too many problems using the corker and getting the cages on. Ended up with 20 750 ml, 5 330 ml, and one pony!
DOH!
was actually going to bottle this today. I had bought the wrong number of 375ml cork bottles (60), and didn't have enough 750ml bottles to cover the rest. Now that I do, I do not have enough corks!!!! DOH!
Well, looks like another weekend goes by without bottling....
TD
So how deep do you set them? Half in / half out? I have only corked two other brews to date, and seems that I set the corks in about 2/3-3/4 leaving just enough of a cork to get your thumbs onto for prying out.
TD