Mardoo
Noob What Craps On A Bit
I'm wondering whether there's a relationship between the percentage of head space in a keg, the pressure one force carbonates at, and the ability of the beer to take up the CO2.
I have always force carbed in the serving keg, after cold crashing and racking to the serving keg. Since starting to pressure ferment, I have been getting the pressure in the fermenting keg to the level I want it for force carbonation, and then cold crashing. If necessary, I top up the pressure during the cold crash, for example after I've lowered the pressure to take a sample.
However, I'm getting unexpected results since I started doing this. I have 50% head space in one of the pressure fermenters that's been in cold crash for nearly two weeks. I've been waiting for the beer to reach the carb level I want before transferring, but it's just not getting there. It's far under-carbed compared to where my serving keg would be if I were carbing in it. I'm shooting for 2.3 volumes, and know pretty much what that feels like on the palate for both force carbed and fermenter carbed beers, and I'd put this somewhere around 1.7-ish volumes - clearly lower, even if my carb-palate isn't as accurate as I think. I check the pressure in the fermenter daily with a gauge I know to be consistently accurate, which is the same one I've always used to check keg pressure. Could there be something to the relationship I mentioned in the top line? Could something else, say, the yeast cake or hop matter be interfering with the uptake of CO2?
As a comparison, I have another pressure fermenting keg that has 25% head space, and it has carbed to the expected level in the usual amount of time. This is what leads me to wonder about the relationship between CO2 uptake and percentage of head space.
@Lyrebird_Cycles @MHB @Pnutapper - any of you able to help? Am I missing something obvious?
I have always force carbed in the serving keg, after cold crashing and racking to the serving keg. Since starting to pressure ferment, I have been getting the pressure in the fermenting keg to the level I want it for force carbonation, and then cold crashing. If necessary, I top up the pressure during the cold crash, for example after I've lowered the pressure to take a sample.
However, I'm getting unexpected results since I started doing this. I have 50% head space in one of the pressure fermenters that's been in cold crash for nearly two weeks. I've been waiting for the beer to reach the carb level I want before transferring, but it's just not getting there. It's far under-carbed compared to where my serving keg would be if I were carbing in it. I'm shooting for 2.3 volumes, and know pretty much what that feels like on the palate for both force carbed and fermenter carbed beers, and I'd put this somewhere around 1.7-ish volumes - clearly lower, even if my carb-palate isn't as accurate as I think. I check the pressure in the fermenter daily with a gauge I know to be consistently accurate, which is the same one I've always used to check keg pressure. Could there be something to the relationship I mentioned in the top line? Could something else, say, the yeast cake or hop matter be interfering with the uptake of CO2?
As a comparison, I have another pressure fermenting keg that has 25% head space, and it has carbed to the expected level in the usual amount of time. This is what leads me to wonder about the relationship between CO2 uptake and percentage of head space.
@Lyrebird_Cycles @MHB @Pnutapper - any of you able to help? Am I missing something obvious?