I have figure out how to successfully dispense nitro beers on my kegerator at home. I perform the following:
1. Keg beer and carbonate to ~1.2 volumes of CO2 using a standard CO2 tank by attaching keg to CO2 tank for a couple of weeks at a pressure setting that dictates volumes to achieve (dependent on temperature)
2. Remove keg form CO2 regulator and move it to my kegerator and attache nitrogen/beer gas regulator.
3. Adjust beer gas pressure to ~30 psi and serve through stout faucet.
(I have about ~ 5 feet of beer line between keg and faucet)
This has resulted in nice creamy pints of stout that cascades and produces a nice tight foamy head.
For my homebrew club, I'd like to serve my nitro beer. We replaced the faucets on one of our jockey boxes with stout taps. We also bought a bottle of beergas and a nitrogen regulator and feed the jockey box with beergas at 30 psi. The end result is not nice creamy pints.
Does anyone have any experience with trying to serve nitro beers on a jockey box and have recommendations on how to do this?
Thanks!
1. Keg beer and carbonate to ~1.2 volumes of CO2 using a standard CO2 tank by attaching keg to CO2 tank for a couple of weeks at a pressure setting that dictates volumes to achieve (dependent on temperature)
2. Remove keg form CO2 regulator and move it to my kegerator and attache nitrogen/beer gas regulator.
3. Adjust beer gas pressure to ~30 psi and serve through stout faucet.
(I have about ~ 5 feet of beer line between keg and faucet)
This has resulted in nice creamy pints of stout that cascades and produces a nice tight foamy head.
For my homebrew club, I'd like to serve my nitro beer. We replaced the faucets on one of our jockey boxes with stout taps. We also bought a bottle of beergas and a nitrogen regulator and feed the jockey box with beergas at 30 psi. The end result is not nice creamy pints.
Does anyone have any experience with trying to serve nitro beers on a jockey box and have recommendations on how to do this?
Thanks!