Just a query with bottling my pilseners. After cold conditioning/lagering in the fridge for several weeks @ 2c, does letting the brew warm up to ambient temps negate a lot/some of the effect of the cold conditioning itself. I ask this because all of my past brews have been cold conditioned, primed with "less" than the usual amount of sugar req'd for priming, and then after 3-4 months of bottle conditioning, they are way too carbonated/fizzy. Something to do with the carbonation already present in the cold brew (~2-5c)at bottling. I'm sick of my brews being overcarbonated, so am thinking of letting the brew warm up to ambient temp(~22c) before bottling, however I'd hate to think that by doing this, the time spent cold conditioning was wasted. What's your informed/learned opinions?
Cheers
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