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Just bottled a brew for the first time. I followed the crowd and bulk primed, which I'm glad I did as I used 3 bottle sizes and trying to get those primed acurately individualy would have been an arse. I decided to be conservative and go for 8 grams a litre as suggested in the coopers kit, I certainly would not be popular for making 50 glass grenades on the first attempt. Fingers crossed and fridge ready.
Found that the bonus of bulk priming is that after bottling you have a fermenter already steralised, just waiting for rinsing out and starting a new brew. Nice.
Friging Pet Peevs, I should just shut up and drink my beer
Dogger
"Listening to someone who brews their own beer is like listening to a religous fanatic talk about the day he saw the light" Ross Murray, Montreal Gazette
"Listening to someone who brews their own beer is like listening to a religous fanatic talk about the day he saw the light" Ross Murray, Montreal Gazette
G'day guys
I have a problem with this my first lager.
Made as per earlier post to this thread. Bottled, left 3 days then into fridge for 4 weeks. Tried 10 days later, a bit flat. Moved to warmer spot, left for 3 weeks, tried again, still flat.
I would appreciate suggestions on what to do next.
Something drastic or try to fix.
Thanks
You can't be a real country unless you have a beer and a airline, but at the very least you need a beer. - Frank Zappa
Are you seeing a sediment build up on the bottom of the bottles, as thick as you would if it had been primed correctly?
And how flat is a bit flat, does it have any carbonation at all?
Dogger
"Listening to someone who brews their own beer is like listening to a religous fanatic talk about the day he saw the light" Ross Murray, Montreal Gazette
There is sediment in the bottle. Looks less than before but this was my first try at racking. Bottles have some gas, but in the glass has no head and few bubbles rising from bottom. I was concerned I had overprimed as I added 180g sugar to 19L
I didn't finish the bottle, gave the leftovers a good shake in the bottle then poured into the glass. Had a nice head that hung around for a while.
Looked good but still tasted flat if this helps.
Thanks
You can't be a real country unless you have a beer and a airline, but at the very least you need a beer. - Frank Zappa
Hi hully,
Not sure if the one you're talking about is the Morgans Saaz Pilsner, but I made one up a couple of months ago following a recipe from HBS.
I used The Morgans Saaz Pilsner, 1kgs Morgans master blend Liguid Lager malt plus extra saaz hops. Bottle primed with carbonation drops as these are quick and easy.
So its been in the bottle conditioning for about 2 months, the beers is carbonated but doesn't hold a head. Not sure if its anything to do with the ingredients used, but I sound to have a similar problem to you.
I have made other batches and all others carbonated well all holding a good head. I'm thinking that I may be should of added 500g body booster (dex/corn syrup) which will help next time.
I haven't bulk primed previously and find the carbonation drops very easy to use if you're bottling not kegging.
From my understanding if you're going to lager then straight into fridge after bottling for 4-8 weeks, then remove and condition/carbonate for 3-4 weeks before going back into fridge to drink.
You need to give each stage time to do it's thing, and remember the longer the better at some stages.
Some people say I have a drinking Problem....
I drink, I get drunk, I fall over....
What's the problem?
And when you say you moved is somewhere warmer, how warm are we talking? If it's a "lager" that comes with an ale yeast, you'll need it to be above 16C, and preferably 18C for carbonation to occur.
Also, how many bottles have you tried. Perhaps the one bottle you tried had a bad seal and the gas escaped?
I am thinking its working, It may need more time to get carbonated.
I like leaving a week after bottling at say 17-20 deg C and then chill it
Dogger
"Listening to someone who brews their own beer is like listening to a religous fanatic talk about the day he saw the light" Ross Murray, Montreal Gazette
G'day Hully,
I've been following this post and although I have not tried lagering I had a very cold cellar ( 5-8 c) for about 2 weeks after bottling a batch of pilsner. It took an extraordinary time to carbonate but is now starting to build up sediment is probably 1/2 way there at the moment. I've had it in the house now for the past 2 weeks at about 15-20 c and it is moving. I am recon and am hoping that in about 2-3 months it should be ready. I can't wait as the flavour is joy in a bottle. I'm hoping that it will be the same for you. In the meantime with the warmer weather I've put down an ale to keep me going.....
Bloody hard to wait though eh! I recomend going to the shop and buying a few Lowenbraus to pass the tiime.
Cheers
Silk
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Now brewing -A Dogger Lager
secondary - empty
new drinking - Kiwi IPA - a bloody ripper !
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I have done that with the second one so hopefully it will condition a bit quicker. I think the first one will stay in the cellar for a couple of months before trying again. I wasn't thinking of lagers until next winter as its warming up here but was encouraged by your comments on another thread about brewing lagers at higher temps. Will have to try another soon.
Silk
I agree the waiting is the hardest, but have just tried a ESB Bock brewed 6 weeks ago. Very nice now, should be great in a couple of months. Not a session beer, just something to savour, could get into trouble if I had too many
You can't be a real country unless you have a beer and a airline, but at the very least you need a beer. - Frank Zappa