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Old 11-04-2009, 12:48 AM   #1
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Default Quick question before I start Kegging.

Got my CO2, got my kegs, got my beer. Shangri-La is near. I sanitized with start san. Now my only question is should I force carb at room temp or wait until its in the fridge for 24 hrs? Im not drinking it until Saturday so no hurry really.
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Old 11-04-2009, 12:59 AM   #2
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I always force carb with 30lbs CO2. Relieve the valve to purge the oxygen, put more CO2 in, then roll the keg around for about 120seconds. hook up the CO2 again.
Put it in the fridge. After three days my beer is always perfectly carbonated and yummy.
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Old 11-04-2009, 01:00 AM   #3
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Sounds easy enough. Thanks for the info. I will let ya know how it turns out.
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Old 11-04-2009, 03:15 AM   #4
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cjmcfoot, are you leaving it at 30 for all 3 days or resetting it to serving pressure after shaking it?
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Old 11-04-2009, 03:47 AM   #5
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What works for me is checking what psi my particular beer style should be carbed add based on typical serving temperature. I don't wait for it to fall to that temp once kegged, I just figure it will get there in a day or so. Meanwhile, let's say it says set it to 28 psi. I'll set to that psi. Shake it...Then set it back to 28 psi and let it sit. The next day I'll shake it, and set it again at 28 psi. I'll do this for about 3 days. Then kick it back to serving pressure.
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Old 11-04-2009, 03:57 AM   #6
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Then after you shake your keg and keep it at a super high psi for days, you can start a thread on why your beer is all foam.

The set and forget method is the most accurate for proper carbonation, but it requires time. The funny thing is , people will spend hundreds of dollars on brewing equipment, spend hours brewing, and weeks fermenting, meticulously clean and sanitize everything in preparation of tasting their homemade masterpiece.

Then skimp on the last step, just to get a mouthful (usually green) a couple of days early. I'm not saying it won't carbonate it faster, i'm saying I despise the practice. I will never shake a homebrew, a baby maybe, but never my beer.
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Old 11-04-2009, 04:16 AM   #7
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Quote:
Originally Posted by wildwest450 View Post
The set and forget method is the most accurate for proper carbonation, but it requires time.
THIS! Your beer won't really be ready any sooner than the keg will carbonate by the set and forget method anyway. Put your keg in the kegerator or keezer and hook it up to your CO2 at whatever is the appropriate psi and it will carbonate.
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Old 11-04-2009, 04:26 AM   #8
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Quote:
Originally Posted by wildwest450 View Post
Then after you shake your keg and keep it at a super high psi for days, you can start a thread on why your beer is all foam.

The set and forget method is the most accurate for proper carbonation, but it requires time. The funny thing is , people will spend hundreds of dollars on brewing equipment, spend hours brewing, and weeks fermenting, meticulously clean and sanitize everything in preparation of tasting their homemade masterpiece.

Then skimp on the last step, just to get a mouthful (usually green) a couple of days early. I'm not saying it won't carbonate it faster, i'm saying I despise the practice. I will never shake a homebrew, a baby maybe, but never my beer.

Dude I've been doing the shake method and I have no problem with foam. The first week of drinking may have about an inch and 1/2 which is 'maybe' a little much, but after that a consistant 1 inch head.
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Old 11-04-2009, 04:31 AM   #9
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Originally Posted by daveooph131 View Post
Dude I've been doing the shake method and I have no problem with foam. The first week of drinking may have about an inch and 1/2 which is 'maybe' a little much, but after that a consistant 1 inch head.
Thats fine, I had to throw my 2cents in, I despise that method. To each his own.
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Old 11-04-2009, 05:43 AM   #10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by daveooph131 View Post
Dude I've been doing the shake method and I have no problem with foam. The first week of drinking may have about an inch and 1/2 which is 'maybe' a little much, but after that a consistant 1 inch head.
You keep it at high pressure for how many days?
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