ksbrain
Well-Known Member
I have an idea that may or may not be true.
Normally I have no patience, and I just put a warm keg in the fridge, hook it up to gas and start drinking it the next day. Eventually it's cold and carbonated and all's well with the world.
Lately, I've been having the beer stay cloudy longer than normal, or dispense hop particles throughout the life of the keg. In contrast, I was able to carbonate one recent beer undisturbed for a few weeks before tapping, and got really no sediment to speak of, not even in the first pint.
I'm wondering if pulling a pint every day or two somehow prevents the gentle settling of yeast and other solids. Anyone think this could be true, or maybe it's complete nonsense.
Normally I have no patience, and I just put a warm keg in the fridge, hook it up to gas and start drinking it the next day. Eventually it's cold and carbonated and all's well with the world.
Lately, I've been having the beer stay cloudy longer than normal, or dispense hop particles throughout the life of the keg. In contrast, I was able to carbonate one recent beer undisturbed for a few weeks before tapping, and got really no sediment to speak of, not even in the first pint.
I'm wondering if pulling a pint every day or two somehow prevents the gentle settling of yeast and other solids. Anyone think this could be true, or maybe it's complete nonsense.