Ok, I'm pretty sure the answer to this question is somewhere on this forum, but I couldn't find it after a lot of searching, so forgive me if this is a repeat.
I am about to keg for the first time (yes, I'm ridiculously excited about this), Jamil's Ordinary Bitter, and have one question: Can I carbonate at say 40 degrees and then bring the temp up to serving temperatures, and still have the same volume of carbonation? Obviously when the beer warms the CO2 will tend to come out of solution, but will the residual "serving pressure" keep the CO2 in solution if you raise the temp 5-10 degrees?
Yes, I'm a little confused about carbonation pressure, head space, and serving pressure, but that is part of what i'm looking forward to figuring out! Just want to understand the first step, carbonating at a given temp - I understand the charts for temp and pressure etc.
Thanks for your help guys.
