Best Way to Carb a Stout?

Discussion in 'Homebrewing' started by Bdalik, Mar 21, 2016.

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  1. Bdalik

    Bdalik Initiate (0) Feb 1, 2015 New Jersey

    Brewed a Imperial Stout. Came out nice and creamy and I don't want to mess it up when going into bottle (only bottling for aging purposes.) I usually use just regular corn sugar for priming, but has anyone ever used anything else for carbing up a higher gravity stout?
     
  2. VikeMan

    VikeMan Grand Pooh-Bah (3,067) Jul 12, 2009 Pennsylvania
    Pooh-Bah

    You say you don't want to mess it up, but then you ask for suggestions to do something different that what apparently works for you. I would stick with your regular process.
     
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  3. billandsuz

    billandsuz Pooh-Bah (2,097) Sep 1, 2004 New York
    Pooh-Bah

    There is no advantage to using anything other than dextrose. You can use DME if you want your beer to be truly all grain (assuming that it is all grain and same for the DME). You can use honey or some other sugar if you want to make it harder than it already is for high gravity yeast.

    Yeast consume sugar and make alcohol and CO2. The yeast would prefer the sugar to be easy to digest, and that would be dextrose.
    Cheers.
     
  4. GormBrewhouse

    GormBrewhouse Pooh-Bah (2,111) Jun 24, 2015 Vermont
    Pooh-Bah

    If you do bottle, let it age for 3-5 months before sampling. My big stouts take that long to full carb up and for the flavors to meld nicely
     
  5. JackHorzempa

    JackHorzempa Grand Pooh-Bah (3,375) Dec 15, 2005 Pennsylvania
    Society Pooh-Bah

    Yup, just stick with corn sugar (dextrose).

    And be very patient before sampling your first bottle.

    Cheers!
     
  6. Yalc

    Yalc Zealot (501) Nov 5, 2011 Florida

    Keg it. Seriously spend the money and keg it. You will thank me one day. By the way you can bottle from the keg......already carbed!!!
     
  7. VikeMan

    VikeMan Grand Pooh-Bah (3,067) Jul 12, 2009 Pennsylvania
    Pooh-Bah

    FWIW, I'm an advocate for kegging. But OP is ready to package now, assuming he hasn't already. Selecting, acquiring, and understanding a kegging system takes some time.
     
  8. daem3384

    daem3384 Zealot (691) Nov 24, 2015 California

    Since its an imperial stout, I'm assuming it's pretty high abv, so the yeast in your beer might be a pretty beat up. I've had great luck with my high gravity brews with pitching 2-3g of rehydrated EC-1118 yeast with the priming sugar in the bottling bucket. It doesn't give any off flavors with long aging periods, carbonates real quick (my 11.2% chocolate stout carbed in a week and a half), and it makes a nice compact sediment layer that doesn't pour out super easily.

    If this seems like too much hassle, just priming sugar will do the trick; it might just take a few months to get to the CO2 level you want.
     
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