🍻 Unleash Your Inner Brewmaster!
Coopers DIY Home Brewing Carbonation Drops offer a simple and effective solution for homebrewers, allowing you to carbonate up to 6 gallons of beer with ease. Each package contains 60 drops, making bottling a breeze. Proudly made in Australia, these drops are designed for convenience and consistent results.
J**P
Good stuff
Used in pale ale worked great
D**E
Great for your home brew.
This was the best option for your money if you’re trying to brew it home and one an easy dose to get the right amount of carbonation for your bottling of your beer there is no cleaning involved and the value of the product was worth the money
M**Y
A quick and easy way to carbonate your home brew...
I've been home brewing for several years now. I started with extract brewing, then went all-grain. I've used a number of methods for carbonation during that time.Table sugar added into the bottle before filling and capping: This is relatively inexpensive and easy, but can be a little messy. Some say you get off-flavors from this, but I've never noticed it. It requires you to figure out the right amount of sugar for the amount of beer you're bottling and the carbonation level you want, but it's a decent solution in my experience.Corn sugar dissolved in boiling water, cooled, and added to the bottling bucket: This is probably the most common method used, and possibly the least expensive. It yields the best control over the amount of carbonation since you calculate and measure out the sugar based on the desired carbonation level and batch size. It's not as easy as the table sugar method, but not exponentially more difficult. Most home brewers swear by it. I've gotten good results from it as long as the wort whirlpools around when I transfer it to the bottling bucket (and thus mixes the sugar in well). In place of corn sugar, I've also used candi syrup successfully for this.Carbonation drops like these: You add one of these to a small bottle or two to a bomber sized bottle. No boiling, no measuring, and you know you're getting a consistent amount of sugar per bottle. The down-side is that you can't control the precise level of carbonation as you can with the other two methods above. You get the amount of carbonation the drop provides - no more, no less. This can be too much for some styles and not enough for others (like the Belgian Tripel, for example).In my experience, all three methods (and their variations like using maple syrup in place of corn sugar) all work. Executed correctly, they provide the sugar you need for the yeast to carbonate your brew. If I'm short on time, I will use the carbonation drops because they're quick and easy. Tear open the package, drop one or two in a bottle, fill it, cap it, and you're done. If I want a precise carbonation level, I'll calculate the amount of corn sugar (or other sugar) I need, boil it up, cool it down, and add it to the bucket. That will get me a style-perfect level of carbonation. If I'm out of corn sugar and carbonation drops, I'll use a special measuring spoon I have and use table sugar.I've never experienced any off-flavors as a result of using any of the above methods.The drops in my experience will fully dissolve in the bottle and leave behind no residue. They provide an average level of carbonation provided your yeast is healthy and the bottle caps seal properly. For some styles, like the Tripel, I'll sometimes add an extra drop per bottle. You just have to be careful in these situations to make sure you use thick bottles. (The kind that Gulden Draak, Trappistes Rochefort 10, and other Belgian beers are packaged in have proven strong enough in my experience.)I've used these Coopers drops, Mangrove Jack drops, Brewer's Friend drops, and others. All of them seems to be equally good. The Brewer's Friend drops seemed to stick together inside the container really badly, which made using them a pain in the backside and resulted in irregular shapes (and probably uneven carbonation). The Coopers and Mangrove Jack drops didn't stick together and seemed to work well.Here's a "pro tip" for those new to home brewing. Always assume that you're going to have a bottle which leaks or explodes. (You probably won't, but making this assumption will save you from unpleasantness later.) When you finish bottling a batch of beer, put the bottles inside a sealed beverage cooler or plastic bin with a locking lid. Let them condition inside this container until they're ready to drink. If something goes wrong and one or more bottles explode or leak on you, the mess will be contained within the cooler or bin. That's a lot better than having glass and sticky beer sprayed across a room in your home or apartment. (So far in 25+ batches I've not had a beer explode, but I did have a bottle of apple wine explode into shards. Fortunately it was a mess inside the plastic bin but that was a relatively easy clean-up.)
K**B
Expensive but works great
Had a batch of beer that just didn’t carbonate properly with priming sugar. Opened the bottles, dropped in these tablets and in 2 weeks the flat beer was fixed. Made it so easy, I just used these on the next batch instead of the priming sugar. I wish that they had half size tablets. Adding 1-1/2 tablets for a 16 oz bottle is a pain. More expensive to use than priming sugar but so simple and easy to use.
V**Z
These will be my go to from now on.
It was my first time using Coopers Carbonation Drops and they worked perfectly! One drop in 17 oz German style bottle and 2 drops for 22 oz Bombers.
N**E
You get what you pay for
There are plenty of methods to add priming sugar when bottle conditioning your brew, most of which can be accomplished at far lower cost than using Coopers carbonation drops. However, I have had very good results using these drops. I put one carbonation drop in each 12-oz bottle, add beer, cap it, wait a week, chill it, and then every bottle I open forms a nice head when poured into a glass.In my years of home brewing I have tried measuring sugar bottle by bottle and also mixing some amount of sugar into the whole batch just prior to bottling--and I always end up with some bottles being overcarbonated (stand back) and other bottles from the same batch being unsatisfying and flat. The carbonation drops take away the guesswork. You get pretty consistent carbonation throughout the batch.The drops came packaged in bubble wrap, undamaged. You want to be careful not to throw the bag around as some of the drops will break or crumble from rough handling. My only packaging complaint is that I wish the bag was resealable with a ziplock or something. I use a bread tie to hold it closed between batches. Also, be sure your hands are dry when you are handling the drops so you don't make a sticky mess.Bottom line: if you are like me and have trouble getting your homebrew to carbonate correctly, spend the extra money for these drops, and you won't be disappointed.
R**N
Much easier than dissolving priming sugar
This is a really convenient way to handle priming at bottling time. The only downside is that it’s a fixed amount per tablet. But it really made a difference in bottling prep time.
D**T
This will not transform water into Seltzer - these are sugar drops!
I feel I did not understand what I was buying. Thiswill not take a glass of water and turn it into Seltzer water, This a noting more than measured doses of sugar!
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