rixta2
Member
- Joined
- 30/6/15
- Messages
- 7
- Reaction score
- 0
Hey guys!
It's my first post here (hopefully many more to come) so let me know if I'm doing anything wrong.
I just recently picked up homebrewing and as per usual I get in way too deep way too quick, whether it be researching, reading or just flat out buying more gear and making more brews.
I have a few 30 litre fermenters set up at the moment and I have just transitioned from 750ml pet bottles to 330ml glass bottles. I am using a spare fermenter as my bottling bucket, and a few 10 litre carboys as secondaries.
My current system is to let my wort ferment until I get a constant gravity reading over 48 hours, empty the wort into my smaller carboys using the tap on the fermenter, let sit for about a week and then syphon into my bottling bucket. This, however, is where I'm having trouble. I don't know how to correctly approach the next step. I am planning on using a bottling wand attached to the tap to fill my bottles, however I want to use dextrose as my carbonation source because the cost of carb drops add up.
I am looking for quite a decent carbonation so my questions are as follows
1. Am I able to put some dextrose in the bottom of all the bottles, fill them all with wort and then bottle them, in that order, or would the CO2 that would exist in the beer escape the bottles while I'm filling up the rest of them?
2. If I am placing the wort in secondary, theoretically it should clear up and the yeast remains at the bottom of the vessel, rather than in the beer, if that is the case then how does the fermentation reaction continue without the yeast being present to catalyses the reaction?
3. How much headspace should I be leaving? It is my understanding that if you fill the bottles too little there isn't enough pressure built up to force the CO2 into the beer.
4. Is there a downside/consequence to having too little headspace?
I understand these questions are vague and the answers change depending on the type of beer being made, however I am just looking to get a rough idea and will adjust the finer details of the process to make them brew specific.
Thanks in advance for all your help guys. It's majorly appreciated.
Ricki.
It's my first post here (hopefully many more to come) so let me know if I'm doing anything wrong.
I just recently picked up homebrewing and as per usual I get in way too deep way too quick, whether it be researching, reading or just flat out buying more gear and making more brews.
I have a few 30 litre fermenters set up at the moment and I have just transitioned from 750ml pet bottles to 330ml glass bottles. I am using a spare fermenter as my bottling bucket, and a few 10 litre carboys as secondaries.
My current system is to let my wort ferment until I get a constant gravity reading over 48 hours, empty the wort into my smaller carboys using the tap on the fermenter, let sit for about a week and then syphon into my bottling bucket. This, however, is where I'm having trouble. I don't know how to correctly approach the next step. I am planning on using a bottling wand attached to the tap to fill my bottles, however I want to use dextrose as my carbonation source because the cost of carb drops add up.
I am looking for quite a decent carbonation so my questions are as follows
1. Am I able to put some dextrose in the bottom of all the bottles, fill them all with wort and then bottle them, in that order, or would the CO2 that would exist in the beer escape the bottles while I'm filling up the rest of them?
2. If I am placing the wort in secondary, theoretically it should clear up and the yeast remains at the bottom of the vessel, rather than in the beer, if that is the case then how does the fermentation reaction continue without the yeast being present to catalyses the reaction?
3. How much headspace should I be leaving? It is my understanding that if you fill the bottles too little there isn't enough pressure built up to force the CO2 into the beer.
4. Is there a downside/consequence to having too little headspace?
I understand these questions are vague and the answers change depending on the type of beer being made, however I am just looking to get a rough idea and will adjust the finer details of the process to make them brew specific.
Thanks in advance for all your help guys. It's majorly appreciated.
Ricki.