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Dry hop in grain bag?

Discussion in 'Beginners Beer Brewing Forum' started by phatuna, Apr 10, 2009.

 

  1. #1
    phatuna

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 10, 2009
    Is dry hopping in a grain bag recommended? I just did it and now I'm not sure if it was the best thing to do. :confused:

    The thought behind it was to keep my beer clean, so I took a grain bag, and soaked it in sanitizer. put my hop pellets into the grain bag with a couple of sterilized marbles so that it would sink. Then jammed that into my carboy.

    I thought that I read that was a recommended method, but now I can't find that thread.

    Can any of you share your dry hop routine?

    thanks!
     
  2. #2
    McKBrew

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 10, 2009
    I don't see a problem with it. I dry hop in the keg with a small paint strainer, which is pretty much the same thing as a grain bag.
     
  3. #3
    ifishsum

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 10, 2009
    I always dry hop with whole hops and no bag, but if I had to use pellets I would definitely bag them.
     
  4. #4
    Beerrific

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 10, 2009
    I have essentially done what you are describing a couple times, works great.
     
  5. #5
    luckylogger6

    Member

    Posted Apr 10, 2009
    Im a new brewer and have only dry hoped two batches but the first batch I just tossed the whole hops in to the secondary, but when I was siphoning out of my carboy the hops kept plugging the hose. I even rubber banded a grain bag over the end of my hose to keep the hops out of the hose but they still kept blocking the end. It was a pain. What is your trick?
     
  6. #6
    DeafSmith

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Apr 11, 2009
    I'm new, too, and have only dry hopped once. I didn't use a bag - just tossed the pellets into the carboy, then about once or twice a day for a week I gently shook the carboy - just enough to wet the hop residue floating on top. That caused most of it to eventually sink to the bottom. Then when I racked to the bottling bucket, I took off the removable tip of the AutoSiphon and placed a large sanitized grain bag over the end of the AS. The grain bag was large enough that it extended up the AutoSiphon past the mouth of the carboy - in fact, it was a little bit of a tight fit so I didn't need to tie the bag to the AutoSiphon, or even to hold it in position. Racked the beer to the bucket with no problems - no sediment in the beer, and it tastes great!
     
  7. #7
    Fusorfodder

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Apr 11, 2009
    Pellet hops will dissolve out of a grain bag, so don't move it around much. Look into getting some hop bags, the pores are much smaller and will keep in the pellets.
     
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