I think I’ve experienced my first gusher infection. After a few months a pale ale gushes out of the bottle and has a bone-dry gravity of 1.00. I assume if it was a priming sugar issue there would still be residual sugars from the dextrine?
My questions are is it still fine to drink if it tastes ok? And I assume the main way to prevent this in the future is to be more thorough with my sanitation?
The gravity read the same for a week before I bottled so I assumed it was done fermenting.
It is every bottle now but was not initially. I think when I first began drinking the beer I had 1 or 2 gushers but now that it’s 2 months since bottling they are all gushers.
I didn’t do anything special to degas but I let the beer sit out for a while and flatten.
I’d chill them all so you don’t have bottle bombs, or else drink them soon.
You could open and recap quickly to let off some pressure, but with gushers that might just be a mess.
I’d also review how you’re cleaning your bottles. A long soak in oxyclean and detergent should get most everything, bottle brush for stubborn stuff (or just throw those out) and then sanitize.
Thankfully all that’s left is a 5L mini-keg which I just released (sanitised and popped the top then recapped) in the fridge.
Yea, maybe I need to use some PBW or something. As is, I just rinse and strip the bottles then soak in Starsan for a minute or so before laying them out on a towel to bottle.
Overpriming was another thought. I measured out the sugar to hit the level I wanted but estimated the volume. It may have been a little high from some trub leftover in bucket. But would an over-prime lower the gravity? The reason I figured infection was because something seemed to be eating the dextrine to get the gravity so low.
The process requires two passes through one’s dishwasher. The first pass is made with automatic dishwasher detergent. The second pass is made with only water and heat dry. The second pass ensures that one’s bottles are residue free and sanitary, as bottle temperature exceeds 60C/140F (the temperature at which most vegetative cells are killed). This technique only works if the people who live in one’s house rinse their dishes well before placing them into the dishwasher. The dishwasher used in this process must clean, free of food debris, and empty before the second pass is made with only bottles on bottling day. The first pass can be combined with the day’s dishes (i.e., as the bottles are used). Beer must be rinsed from the bottles before they are placed into the dishwasher on the first pass.
I soak bottles in oxiclean for several hours. Then the night before I bottle, I run them in the dishwasher on high heat with no sops to sanitize. I leave them in there until I bottle.