Why Is My Beer Not Carbonating? - Wine Making and Beer Brewing Blog - Adventures in Homebrewing (2024)

Why Is My Beer Not Carbonating? - Wine Making and Beer Brewing Blog - Adventures in Homebrewing (1)I made a batch of Mexican beer that I primed with 1 tsp. per 16 oz. bottle. After 45 days, but the beer is flat. The taste is OK, but no bubbles. Can I reprime it? Why is my beer not carbonating?
Name:Bruce
State:Montana
—–
Hi Bruce,
As you probably know, beer carbonates in the beer bottle when the yeast in the beer is given an extra dose of sugar (known as priming sugar). The yeast then converts the sugar into CO2. Since the beer bottle is sealed, the CO2 has nowhere to go besides into solution, thus carbonating your beer. This is called bottle conditioning.
If your homebrew beer is flat, it likely means one of three things:

  1. The beer yeast is not consuming the priming sugar due to lack of time or cold temperature,
  2. The beer yeast does not have enough sugar to convert into CO2, or
  3. The beer bottles are not thoroughly sealed.

If you used 1 tsp. of corn sugar per bottle, that should be sufficient. However, if you primed with dried malt extract, this may not be enough to produce the desired carbonation level.
Either way, before you re-prime the flat beer bottles, I would recommend troubleshooting this flat beer in the following order.

  • First, ensure that your flat beer bottles have been sitting in a room with a steady temperature of 70°-75°F. Temperatures lower than this could cause the beer to carbonate very slowly or not at all. Keep in mind that certain closets and storage areas may not be as warm as the rest of the house. If you suspect that the beer bottles were in a cooler storage room, move them somewhere warmer and wait another two-three weeks. By the way, when someone ask: “why is my beer not carbonating?” this is by far the most likely the solution to the problem.Why Is My Beer Not Carbonating? - Wine Making and Beer Brewing Blog - Adventures in Homebrewing (2)
  • Second, check that all of the bottles of flat beer have been capped securely. If there’s any kind of leak, the CO2 pressure may be escaping. This could be happening if you’re using twist-off beer bottles instead of pop-off beer bottles. Maybe it was just the first bottle you opened that didn’t have a good seal?

If the first two actions didn’t fix the problem, then you can re-prime the bottles of flat beer. I would only do this if you are certain that the bottles have had at least six to eight weeks of conditioning time in a room at 70°-75°F.
Consider this carefully – if you add too much sugar to the bottles, you run the risk of bottle bombs. Keep in mind that beer bottles primed with honey or DME may require more time than bottles primed with corn sugar.
Here’s how to re-prime beer if you decide to do so: open each bottle and add half as much priming sugar as you did the first time and reseal with sanitized bottle caps. Move the bottles to a safe location where they won’t make a mess or hurt someone if they explode.
Why Is My Beer Not Carbonating? - Wine Making and Beer Brewing Blog - Adventures in Homebrewing (3)Chances are high that all you need to do is give your bottles adequate time at the appropriate temperature. For more ideas about carbonating your homebrew, consider this blog post.
So, if your homebrew beer is flat can you re-prime? Yes. Should you? Maybe, but not likely. Remember re-priming a flat beer is a last resort. Troubleshooting flat beer can be tricky. Just remember, it is only after you have tried to keep the flat beer at a reasonable temperature first, that’s how to re-prime beer.
Thanks again for your question and good luck!
—–
David Ackley is a beer writer, brewer, and self-described “craft beer crusader.” He holds a General Certificate in Brewing from the Institute of Brewing and Distilling and is founder and editor of the Local Beer Blog.

Why Is My Beer Not Carbonating? - Wine Making and Beer Brewing Blog - Adventures in Homebrewing (2024)

FAQs

Why Is My Beer Not Carbonating? - Wine Making and Beer Brewing Blog - Adventures in Homebrewing? ›

If your homebrew beer is flat, it likely means one of three things: The beer yeast is not consuming the priming sugar due to lack of time or cold temperature, The beer yeast does not have enough sugar to convert into CO2, or. The beer bottles are not thoroughly sealed.

Why is my homebrew not carbonating? ›

Forgetting to add priming sugar and not getting a good seal with the bottle cap or keg lid can be another reason for lack of carbonation. The easiest solution to these problems is to dose each bottle with additional sugar.

How do you increase carbonation in homebrew? ›

More Homebrewing

Carbonation occurs naturally in beer since yeast produce carbon dioxide along with alcohol when they eat sugar. Giving the yeast a specific amount of sugar just before bottling produces exactly the amount of carbonation needed. The amount of carbonation you get depends on the amount of sugar you add.

Why is my homebrew beer flat? ›

The reason for this is that the leftover yeast needs to convert the sugar or carbonation drops added to the bottle into carbon dioxide. For this to occur it needs to be at a temperature that the yeast can live. At this time of year brewer's beers go flat because the bottles are cold due to decreasing temperature.

Why is beer fizzy but wine isn't? ›

yeast digests sugar and produces alcohol and CO2. In normal winemaking the fermentation vats are not sealed so the CO2 escapes into the atmosphere.

How do you force carbonate homebrew? ›

To burst carbonate your homebrew, crank up your CO2 regulator to 30 psi for 24 hours. Then reduce down to normal serving pressure, which is around 12 psi to15 psi (depending on your beer line length and altitude). That should leave your beer 75% carbonated. It should take another 3 to 4 days to reach peak carbonation.

Why does my beer have no fizz? ›

If your homebrew beer is flat, it likely means one of three things: The beer yeast is not consuming the priming sugar due to lack of time or cold temperature, The beer yeast does not have enough sugar to convert into CO2, or. The beer bottles are not thoroughly sealed.

How long does it take for homebrew to carbonate? ›

Typically, I have beer that's ready to drink within seven days, and I'm confident of complete carbonation within 14 days. In extreme cases (very high alcohol, very long pre-packaging conditioning/lagering) this process could take longer, but should not take more than 3–4 weeks.

Does adding more sugar to homebrew make it stronger? ›

As long as you add sugars that are fermentable by the yeast used to make the beer, and you still have yeast that are viable (alive and able to ferment), then yes, adding more sugar will increase the alcohol content in the finished beer.

What increases carbonation? ›

A colder drink is a bubblier one

Another important factor influencing carbonation is temperature. Most gases, including carbon dioxide, do not dissolve well in liquids as the temperature of the liquid rises. That's why carbonated drinks go flat if you leave them out at room temperature.

How do you know if homebrew is bad? ›

If you have a persistent off-flavor that continues to appear with every batch you make, you either have an infection or need to clean / replace your siphon lines. Another more obvious sign of a hidden infection is a continuous over-attenuation.

How do you fix flat beer? ›

The majority of the time it is that the yeast did not eat up all the sugar, in the bottles. What we recommend here is letting the bottles sit for another 2 weeks at room temperature and that should help fix the under carbonation.

Can homebrew beer ferment too long? ›

Beer, we always recommend that you bottle your beer no later than 24 days in the fermenter. You can go longer but the longer your beer sits the more chance you have to get an infection and get off-flavors in your beer.

Why did my homebrew not carbonate? ›

When bottling homebrewed beer via the bottle conditioning process there are two main issues which can result in bottles that are under-carbonated: insufficient amount of priming sugar or tired yeast which was unable to complete the bottle conditioning process.

Why is my homebrew wine fizzy? ›

There are several reasons why a still wine may be fizzy. The first is accidental fermentation in the bottle. This happens when there is sugar and living yeast in the wine when it is bottled. This is a flaw that happens infrequently, and usually with home winemakers.

How to get fizz back in beer? ›

The beer will likely be filtered which will remove most of all of the yeast so more sugar won't recarb it. You could use a carbonator cap and CO2 to do what you want, though. The yeast will likely change the character of the beer. Quick solution would be to go with the carbonation drops.

Why is my homebrew not bubbling after 2 days? ›

Lag Phase: Depending on the size of your yeast pitch, you may notice that there is no activity after a full day or two, this could be due to an under pitch of yeast. If this is the case, they are working on multiplying before they convert sugar into alcohol and CO2.

Why is my keg not carbonating? ›

Flat beer in a keg is usually due to the keg being under gassed or the keg having a gas leak. Before you gas the keg a second time you will need to check the keg for leaks. To do this you need to set your regulator to 40 psi (280kpa) and pump gas into the keg for about 5 minutes. This will be enough to test the keg.

Why is my home brew beer still bubbling? ›

Three weeks is a good length of time for fermentation. The airlock bubbling doesn't mean there is still fermentation (it just means gas is being released). You can only be sure fermentation has finished if you have constant gravity readings over a couple of days (using hydrometer).

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