Sugar Substitute
- Nobby Novice
- Steady Drinker
- Posts: 96
- Joined: Tue Apr 14, 2009 12:56 pm
- Location: Swindon
Sugar Substitute
Hi, my homebrew shop has run out of brewing sugar. I have used demerera to prime my bottles for ales, but what can I use to prime my pilsener without changing the taste ? I have seen somewhere that granulated sugar is not really recommended.
Fermenting 1: Browning's Porter
36 Pint Cask:
Brewing :Christmas's Past Golden Ale
Drinking :Boddingtons Bitter Clone
36 Pint Cask:
Brewing :Christmas's Past Golden Ale
Drinking :Boddingtons Bitter Clone
- OldSpeckledBadger
- Under the Table
- Posts: 1477
- Joined: Sat Feb 21, 2009 4:31 pm
- Location: South Staffordshire
Re: Sugar Substitute
Not recommended by who?Nobby Novice wrote:I have seen somewhere that granulated sugar is not really recommended.
Best wishes
OldSpeckledBadger
OldSpeckledBadger
Re: Sugar Substitute
Badger is right, dumping a bag of Tate and Lyle in your beer will have detrimental effects on your beer
but priming with it is fine, it's such a small amount, brewing sugar just dissolves a bit quicker
but priming with it is fine, it's such a small amount, brewing sugar just dissolves a bit quicker
- Nobby Novice
- Steady Drinker
- Posts: 96
- Joined: Tue Apr 14, 2009 12:56 pm
- Location: Swindon
Re: Sugar Substitute
Thanks for the advice. I must have read somewhere that it is not recommended for brewing, so thought better of using granulated for priming. I can now get my pilsner bottled.
Fermenting 1: Browning's Porter
36 Pint Cask:
Brewing :Christmas's Past Golden Ale
Drinking :Boddingtons Bitter Clone
36 Pint Cask:
Brewing :Christmas's Past Golden Ale
Drinking :Boddingtons Bitter Clone
Re: Sugar Substitute
Granulated is fine for priming and also for using in reasonable amounts in the actual recipe. If you want half your fermentables to come from sugar then it will probably taste crap (although using almost any sort of sugar for that amount is not going to give great results IMO - 'brewing' sugar or not).