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7 answers

Could be a number of reasons:

1. The yeast may no longer be viable;

2. You didn't add priming sugar at bottling time;

3. after bottling, the bottles may have been kept at too low a temperature for the yeast to carbonate.

2007-04-24 15:46:57 · answer #1 · answered by dogglebe 6 · 1 0

in case you dont bottle it and the field its in isnt finished you will merely finally end up with flat beer; once you carbonate beer you feed the yeast extra sugars yet dont enable the co2 to flee (once you ferment you enable the co2 get away by way of an airlock), the co2 will tension its before into the brew, giving beer its carbonation; if the field isnt finished, lots of the co2 would have too plenty floor area above the brew Annabean's technique comprises kegging, you dont would desire to rigidity approximately psi or any tension except you're utilising a kegging equipment, which im assuming you're actually not

2016-11-27 01:07:49 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Most likely you have a leak - oxygen is getting in and CO2 is getting out. I've found that naturally carbonating my beer is, by far, the most difficult part of home brewing - I've made several batches of tasty brew that was as flat as can be. Lately, I've been considering a CO2 injector kit, which aren't too expensive, but, somehow I feel like it's cheating - good luck.

2007-04-24 04:15:44 · answer #3 · answered by bifferson 2 · 1 1

Could be one of several reasons:
-Yeast was not viable at time of pitching. If the yeast you are using is too old, it just won't work.
-Yeast pitched before the wort cooled enough, which kills the yeast.

If fermentation definitely occurred than the yeast was viable. The problems then could be:
-Not enough sugar added to the beer right before bottling. Check your brewing notes and make sure you added the priming sugar and added the right amount.
-Didn't get a good seal on your bottles when capping. Make sure the capper crimped the crowns nice and tight. Don't use screw-top bottles.
-If you used swing top bottles (Grolsch type) make sure the gaskets are in good shape; CO2 can leak out of the cracked gaskets.

2007-04-24 05:13:59 · answer #4 · answered by Rookie Researcher 2 · 2 1

Try kneeling down and saying a few words of praise to Gittamdreenkin, the god of carbonated beer. Sacrifices aren't necessary, but not turned away either.

2007-04-24 05:35:19 · answer #5 · answered by donalbainbinnensnotz 3 · 1 1

you need to put sugar into the beer so the yeast can reactivate and produce the carbonation

2007-04-24 08:29:13 · answer #6 · answered by Maximus 1 2 · 0 0

not enough sugar?

2007-04-24 04:13:26 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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