stevea1210
Well-Known Member
I received mine in the mail yesterday. It looks great and threaded on perfectly. I didn't bottle anything yet, so I can't give it a full review at this time.
... apfelwein to bring on a trip...
I've filled roughly half a keg's worth of bottles buy slipping a Grolsch style gasket onto my sanitized Perlick nozzle.
1. Bleed excess gas from the keg.
2. Set your gas to just enough PSI to dispense.
3 Push a bottle up onto the Perlick until it seals with the Grolsch gasket.
4. Turn on the tap and tilt the bottle ever so slightly to one side to let gas escape while the bottle fills.
5. You can straighten the bottle at any time throughout the filling process to slow or stop the flow of beer.
I've liked this process so far since the control of beer is easily within reach, you don't need any additional plumbing, and my drip tray can catch any excess foam or drips.
No, I bottled from a cold keg that had already been force carbonated.
-Joe
Glad you guys are liking these. I just used mine to fill two growlers and a 1L soda bottle
-Joe
Ordered. Stuntmantoo how did you do yours?
Has anyone else tried bottling with the stopper? I have just been setting the keg on a lower pressure after bleeding the pressure and simply filling bottles, I don't get much foam and I don't have to deal with the stopper.
I've filled roughly half a keg's worth of bottles buy slipping a Grolsch style gasket onto my sanitized Perlick nozzle.
1. Bleed excess gas from the keg.
2. Set your gas to just enough PSI to dispense.
3 Push a bottle up onto the Perlick until it seals with the Grolsch gasket.
4. Turn on the tap and tilt the bottle ever so slightly to one side to let gas escape while the bottle fills.
5. You can straighten the bottle at any time throughout the filling process to slow or stop the flow of beer.
I've liked this process so far since the control of beer is easily within reach, you don't need any additional plumbing, and my drip tray can catch any excess foam or drips.