

Will do. There is some yeast now collecting at the bottom indentations of the sentinel bottles. They're getting harder.trucker5774 wrote:Great work Lari. I'm still chilling as before (moving house soon so brewing is on hold) Once I have a supply of swing tops I will be playing again. Keep us posted, mate.
Jason, I think he has already done a test! One thing is sure, they have never exploded in my fridgejason123 wrote:Interesting stuff Lari.
My wonder is whether the grolsh bottle tops will take the pressure. When you raise the temperature for pasturising, the already pressurized bottles are goning to get a lot more pressurized by the heat build up from the fluid expansion, gas expansion etc.
If you have the opportunity, I'd test one somewhere safe first to make sure you don't explode the whole batch.
Jason, Trucker was right. I had already tested one bottle. But read on.jason123 wrote:Interesting stuff Lari.
My wonder is whether the grolsh bottle tops will take the pressure. When you raise the temperature for pasturising, the already pressurized bottles are goning to get a lot more pressurized by the heat build up from the fluid expansion, gas expansion etc.
If you have the opportunity, I'd test one somewhere safe first to make sure you don't explode the whole batch.
Yes, they are all at room temperature (except the last remaining sentinel bottle which was not pasteurized, being plastic). Either it's confidence or it's hubris and I'm living dangerously.trucker5774 wrote:Well done Lari. I'm looking forward to the final report. Be sure to keep them at room temperature (I'll allow you to chill and drink a couple) as at room temperature we will know if the fermentation has been halted.
As a point of interest, when I use my fridge yeast halt method, I bottle around 1020 t0 1030, depending on the OG and desired strength. I only leave them about 36 hours before fridge halting and there is sufficient carbonation to match a commercial cider.
Sounds like what you say is correct Lari.Laripu wrote:I've wimped out. On Sunday, my wife noticed that the cider was less sweet and a lot fizzier. So some yeast must have survived.
I've moved the whole batch into our second fridge... and thank goodness we have one.it's still very good.
Next time I'll put fewer bottles at a time into the stove, i.e. 3 batches of 15 or 16 half-litre bottles. I'll put them in when the stove is cold, start timing when the stove hits 176F=80C. I'll leave them in for 40 minutes instead of 30.
The whole procedure will take longer, but still under 3 hours and it's all pretty easy.
Not quite right. Here's the whole procedure:aleian wrote:Only just found this thread, what a great read! So, have I got this right? You bottle early, leave the bottles for a few days to carbonate (building some pressure), put them in the oven, warming and expanding the contents, bringing the CO2 out of solution, increasing the pressure even more
then take the hot bottles out of the oven and cool them in the kitchen
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before storing?
Laripu, you have balls of steel and I bow down to your reckless disregard for personal safety.
I've just told SWMBO about your method - think I'll have to wait until she's out before I give it a go though!
Keep up the good work!