Hi guys,
My first post!
I'm very new to home brewing and just bottled my third brew. I noticed when i was bottling that this time round the beer seemed to be quite carbonated straight out of the fermenter (in comparison to the first 2 that I did), I shook one of the bottles up and it fizzed a bit and afterwards the (PET) bottle seemed a little pressurised. The first two brews i did appeared to be completely flat when i bottled them so im just a bit worried about exploding bottles (i primed with carb drops as well).
The batch in question is a Canadienne India Pale Ale with a blend of LDM, dextrose and maltodextrin, and my first time using Safale yeast, kept at 20-23 degrees. The first 2 batches were lagers with kit yeast.
Airlock activity was far more subdued than the lager brews, and had all but ceased for a good few days before bottling (even though SG was still slowly getting lower). Final SG was also higher than the lagers (1.015).
Hows she looking Doc?
My first post!
I'm very new to home brewing and just bottled my third brew. I noticed when i was bottling that this time round the beer seemed to be quite carbonated straight out of the fermenter (in comparison to the first 2 that I did), I shook one of the bottles up and it fizzed a bit and afterwards the (PET) bottle seemed a little pressurised. The first two brews i did appeared to be completely flat when i bottled them so im just a bit worried about exploding bottles (i primed with carb drops as well).
The batch in question is a Canadienne India Pale Ale with a blend of LDM, dextrose and maltodextrin, and my first time using Safale yeast, kept at 20-23 degrees. The first 2 batches were lagers with kit yeast.
Airlock activity was far more subdued than the lager brews, and had all but ceased for a good few days before bottling (even though SG was still slowly getting lower). Final SG was also higher than the lagers (1.015).
Hows she looking Doc?