user 99787
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Also
Pressure fermenting is another option so the beer is carbonated by the time you are finished in the fermentation vessle
I have no patience to wait for a keg to slowly carbonate. I always force carbonate and shake the keg it takes some practice to get it right and you may need to add more gas but its relatively easy. I also pour at 12 PSI so your beer line length and diameter will make a differnce. Your pouring PSI will depend on a lot of factors and could also cause a foaming effect that looks like over carbonation.
I crash chill my beer to 0-2 deg rack to a keg. Then dial PSI regulator to 45 PSI I then rock/shake the top of the keg back and forth vigourously for 15-20 seconds. Turn the bottle off and shake while watching the dial and count for 15 seconds you want the preasure to drop to about 20 PSI on 15 seconds of shaking then shake for a furthur 10 seconds. Then let the keg sit for at least half an hour.
As I said its trial and error. If you need more gas crank it up to 45 PSI and shake again for 5 seconds then turn off the bottle and shake keeping an eye on the dial until it hits 20 PSI around the 15 second mark and then shake for another 10 seconds.
If you over carbonate turn the bottle off and burp until its around 10 PSI and pour and drink as you go until the beer hits the carbonation you want then turn the bottle back on to your prefered pouring preasure.
but its what floats ya boat, but a 2 weeks in the keg carbing up is not much to wait and the beer will be great to drink
It depends on the temperature you are fermenting at and the style of beer that you are making to how much CO2 you want in liquidWhat PSI would you pressure ferment at?
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