LRAT
Well-Known Member
Hey there,
I've been pondering a question for a while and I'd appreciate some guidance:
How can I calculate the necessary priming sugar after pressure fermenting?
A little while back, I got myself a Fermzilla conical fermenter from Kegland.
I recently brewed a simple SMASH beer (OG 1.051 FG 1.012).
During fermentation, I kept the beer under 50 kPa pressure at around 20°C.
Once I hit the FG, I let the beer sit in the fermenter for an additional three days while maintaining the pressure.
Two days ago, I initiated a cold crash to 2°C, and the beer has been chilling at that temperature since then.
While it was cooling, I connected a CO2 bottle and used a pressure regulator to sustain the pressure at 50 kPa to prevent suck-back and fermenter collpase.
I know that colder beer absorbs more CO2 compared to warmer beer.
Now, I'm looking to bottle the beer (totaling 37 liters), but I'm uncertain about the amount of priming sugar required.
My aim is to achieve a CO2 concentration of 2.4 in the beer. Can anyone provide guidance on how to tackle this?
Many thanks in advance!
Luke
I've been pondering a question for a while and I'd appreciate some guidance:
How can I calculate the necessary priming sugar after pressure fermenting?
A little while back, I got myself a Fermzilla conical fermenter from Kegland.
I recently brewed a simple SMASH beer (OG 1.051 FG 1.012).
During fermentation, I kept the beer under 50 kPa pressure at around 20°C.
Once I hit the FG, I let the beer sit in the fermenter for an additional three days while maintaining the pressure.
Two days ago, I initiated a cold crash to 2°C, and the beer has been chilling at that temperature since then.
While it was cooling, I connected a CO2 bottle and used a pressure regulator to sustain the pressure at 50 kPa to prevent suck-back and fermenter collpase.
I know that colder beer absorbs more CO2 compared to warmer beer.
Now, I'm looking to bottle the beer (totaling 37 liters), but I'm uncertain about the amount of priming sugar required.
My aim is to achieve a CO2 concentration of 2.4 in the beer. Can anyone provide guidance on how to tackle this?
Many thanks in advance!
Luke