So, Here's a few questions for you all ....
prior to this, I used two kegs for wine I brewed in Montana before I moved down here to Tennessee. The wines were still, so I didn't need the carbonation. One other keg had a stout, which I was never able to fully carbonate, (my gauges screwed up and I had to wait for a slow boat from China to get a new one!) and I ended up drinking the whole 5 gallons at 'almost flat' carbonation. Now the regulator has gone TU, so I've got to buy a new one.
A while back, I bought a Cooper's Pale Ale brewing kit from a thrift store (Brand new, but originally sold in 2010 for $140 - only $10! ..... Extract was in a can and the yeast was still good.). It was an extract kit with some extra sugar, but the ABV is probably only going to be in the 3.5 to 4.5 range, and it included the fermenter and enuff 22 oz. PET bottles for the whole brew. Weird fermenter, but it seemed to work OK - no airlock!
I know it was old, but I couldn't resist it for the price! I haven't tasted it since it went into the keg, so it may end up in the chicken feed if it's too fowl! (Couldn't resist the play on words!)
At my age I can only find temp jobs for work, so the day I brewed, I found I had to go to a job right away and didn't have time to carbonate it, just auto-siphoned it into a sanitized keg (flushed w/CO2), and it's been aging for about a month or so.
I'm planning to use the "Biermuncher no stinking beer gun" method of filling the bottles (IF I can get the regulator to co-operate and lower the pressure enuff to avoid the foam), but I'd like some input about how I can go about carbing with sugar/honey, etc.
1) As mentioned, the PET bottles are 22 oz. Any ideas on how much sugar/honey/corn sugar I should put into each bottle before filling them with the beer? NOTE: I'll be flushing each bottle with CO2 and capping it before I start the bottling process.
2) IF I can get the regulator to co-operate and lower the pressure enuff to fill the bottles without too much foam, how long (days?/hours?) should I leave them at room temps (about 72F today) before refrigerating so they don't get overcarbed?
3) Any idea about how long it should take to carb to about 2.3 or somewhere in that vicinity of volumes?
If I get some helpful responses, I'll just do a sixer for starters to see how it works, just in case I'll need some more advice. I read somewhere that when these plastic bottles are too hard to squeeze, they are pretty much fully carbed - is that so?
BTW, if I can't get the regulator to co-operate, I'll just have to release the pressure, open the keg and auto-siphon and bottle with a wand like I would with a bucket. If I have to go that route, I'll just prime the whole thing at once, but I'll taste it first ;>)!
TIA
MT2sum