Be REAL careful.......I've had exploding bottles due to
overcarbonation. So, think about where you store them. Put a box of empty
bottles on top of them so any explosions don't scatter shrapnel around the
room and think hard about what kind of floor they're sitting on and how a
nice large beer stain would look and smell.
At 08:11 PM 11/25/2003 -0600, you wrote:
Jim,
I recently had trouble with my last batch carbonating.
My solution: Move all my bottles upstairs where it is warmer.
After a couple of weeks it was perfectly carbonated. It took me a few
days to realize that bottle conditioning is really just another
fermentation stage. If the yeast is too cold it won't do its job. By
the way, before moving them upstairs, I kept them in my living-room
which stays around 70. Just a few degrees can make a big difference.
Hope this helps. I would hate to uncap and recap all those bottles if I
didn't need to.
-Shawn
On Nov 25, 2003, at 7:19 PM, jvoosen(a)usfamily.net wrote:
> I brewed up an American Amber Ale extract kit. When it came bottling
> time I boiled the proper corn sugar and added it to the beer. After a
> month it is still flat as a pancake. No carbination.
>
> I was reading "Ben's Beer Book" and he recommended adding a few
grains
> of yeast, recapping and waiting two weeks. If this does not work he
> said to add a few grains of corn sugar, recap and wait.
>
> Has anyone else tried the above with any success???
>
> Thanks!
>
> Jim Voosen
> Stillwater, Mn
>
>
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//Mike Behrendt
email - MBehrendt(a)mn.rr.com