charlesmartin
Well-Known Member
OK so, I am working on my first batch...two and a half weeks in the primary and I will probably bottle in another ten days. I read the 45-page bottling thread mentioned in an earlier post and got a lot of good ideas but no solution to my dilemma. I started with a beginners set with just one bucket with a spigot which I used for my primary (I do not have an easily accessable LHBS to buy a second bucket). Since I do not want to disturb the yeast bed (and it is probably covering the spigot opening any way), how should I proceed to bottle? Should I rack to a temporary vessel like my brewpot with the priming solution already in there and then rack to bottles via siphon hose and filling wand? Should I rack to the brewpot, clean out and sanitize the bucket with the spigot, add priming sugar to the bucket and rerack to the bucket and use spigot with filling tube attached to bottle? Any other suggestions?
it's kinda like a puzzle. the racking to kettle on top of the priming solution and then trying to rack with the filling wand will be a job. it is possible, but you might get really frustrated.
racking twice (from primary to kettle to bottling bucket is not a bad idea...if you do it carefully. that would almost be the same as racking to secondary and then to a bottling bucket (you are just going from secondary to bottling bucket in a very short amount of time). if you do it this way, you would want to have your priming solution ready before you start any of the racking. you just don't want the beer to sit out in the open too long.
a final idea, which might make for some cloudy beer:
1-pour your priming solution into your beer in your bottling bucket
2-stir very carefully
3-prop the spigot side of the bucket on a book (1 inch maybe)
4-use your spoon (or your sanitized arm) to gently push the trub away from the spigot
5-wait a few minutes for it to settle a bit
6-sanitize the spigot from the outside
7-attach sanitized bottling wand
8-fill and cap bottles
9-purchase a primary--the better bottle sounds like a good idea.
i don't know about in japan, but restaurants or grocery stores with bakeries in the US get food grade buckets that contain icing, filling, etc. when they are finished with them, they give them away or sell them for a small amount. stay away from pickle buckets.
you can get one of those, clean it with baking soda--to help remove the lingering smell, and then use it as your primary. good luck.