what should i do if i have a belgian dark strong bottled been 1 month and its undercarbonted (no head and light bubbles)
is there anywy to carbonate it
Should i re-cap with sugar added?
Where have you stored the bottles ? What's your rough guess of the temperature of the bottles ? I'm thinking if the storage temperature is too low, the yeast is "sleeping", meaning secondary carbonation is not taking place.
nah its around 18celcius i didnt have a measurer at the time and didnt put enough priming sugar in
bit of a bummer as i was after a medium carbonation but its just too low and tastes like wine
i dont bulk prime but 19litre batch used like half a teaspoon for 375ml
opened around 3 or so
Famous last words, but I don't think you should do anything too rash, unless of course you want to drink all these beers within next three months.
Since these sound like stubbies, grab three and chill as cold as possible. Take lids off, add more sugar and re cap. Don't expose to much air to bottle and be prepared for the sugar as it enters bottle to liberate some CO2 ie watch out for some mini gushers ! If possible, dissolve the sugar (say two teaspoons) in one teaspoon of boiling water rather than just plop sugar crystals in.
Leave these three bottles in warmish place (don't cook them !) next to three untreated bottles in a month and see if there is any significant difference.
The longer you leave the beer stored where the yeast can work, the more effective the carbonation will be. If I make a brew that I know I won't open for six months, I'll deliberately put less sugar in the bottle. I've got some eight months old ales that were perfectly carbed four months ago that are over carbed now (though they have been stored over summer, where you are now storing coming into winter). Another point is that a belgium dark strong may like a bit more bottle conditioning than a month anyway. Have patience, experiment with three bottles and see what happens.
+1 on that notion.Big beers can keep fermenting slowly in the bottle over time. Maybe a year though
It is kind of cold in my shed, but should I expect more carbonation over time?
Adelaide shed temperatures have been quite cold lately. It depends on the type of yeast you used, but remember that the carbonation process is just another fermentation. And just like primary fermentation, if it's too cold, your yeast will be sluggish. So you can either wait (patience, grasshopper) or put the bottles somewhere warmer.
ive come to the conclusion that the RIS didnt have enough live/healthy yeast to cope with the %alc. It probably sat too long after fermenting out before bottling. Flavours are awsome but its sickly cause of no carbonation and extra priming sugar. probably going to have to keg it and just have it sitting there unconnected most of the time.
(EDIT: it was the Nottingham Danstar yeast - not a true lager yeast but good for the cold weather brewing)
I am sure you simply need to move the bottles somewhere warmer (but don't go overboard and cook them) and give them another two weeks.
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