Joerg
2017-10-06 14:32:42 UTC
On advice here in the group I bought some Biofine a month ago. Now three
batches in secondary are almost finished and I will bottle those on
Monday. So the time to add Biofine to my Belgian Tripel would be
Saturday I assume.
Question: In promotional material for Biofine I read that it passivates
all remaining yeast or something like that. However, I do need some
residual yeast to work off the 3-4oz of corn sugar and create good
carbonation in the bottles. Is that still going to work?
I want to start with a teaspoon full for a 5-gal batch. Or maybe two if
you guys think that is better but I really don't want to ruin my Belgian
Tripel because that's my favorite beer. It wouod be very sa if that
fails to carbonate.
My main reason for such "post-fining" is that I had numerous Belgian
Tripel and some Saison bottles grenade. Carbonation calculators seems
almost useless with Belgian yeast strains.
batches in secondary are almost finished and I will bottle those on
Monday. So the time to add Biofine to my Belgian Tripel would be
Saturday I assume.
Question: In promotional material for Biofine I read that it passivates
all remaining yeast or something like that. However, I do need some
residual yeast to work off the 3-4oz of corn sugar and create good
carbonation in the bottles. Is that still going to work?
I want to start with a teaspoon full for a 5-gal batch. Or maybe two if
you guys think that is better but I really don't want to ruin my Belgian
Tripel because that's my favorite beer. It wouod be very sa if that
fails to carbonate.
My main reason for such "post-fining" is that I had numerous Belgian
Tripel and some Saison bottles grenade. Carbonation calculators seems
almost useless with Belgian yeast strains.
--
Regards, Joerg
http://www.analogconsultants.com/
Regards, Joerg
http://www.analogconsultants.com/