Forgive me if this has been talked about before, but I couldn't find any answer to this question.
Say that I primary for 2 weeks and then keg/carb/condition for another 3 weeks. Would that result in the same "conditioning" if I primary for 3 weeks and keg/carb/condition for 2 weeks (or 4primary/1keg)? I would think it would be similar, but I'm wondering if there is also some time the beer needs to be in the keg just to "acclimate" to it's new home, similar to bottle shock when bottling (if that is a thing). Is there a benefit to condition on the yeast vs. off? I know you want to leave it on the yeast long enough for the yeast to clean up after its party, but does that also translate to conditioning?
These primary/keg times are arbitary, though I generally primary for 3 weeks and then bottle carb/condition for another 3 weeks or so (haven't gotten into kegging yet but am looking into that for the next step, hence the question).
Say that I primary for 2 weeks and then keg/carb/condition for another 3 weeks. Would that result in the same "conditioning" if I primary for 3 weeks and keg/carb/condition for 2 weeks (or 4primary/1keg)? I would think it would be similar, but I'm wondering if there is also some time the beer needs to be in the keg just to "acclimate" to it's new home, similar to bottle shock when bottling (if that is a thing). Is there a benefit to condition on the yeast vs. off? I know you want to leave it on the yeast long enough for the yeast to clean up after its party, but does that also translate to conditioning?
These primary/keg times are arbitary, though I generally primary for 3 weeks and then bottle carb/condition for another 3 weeks or so (haven't gotten into kegging yet but am looking into that for the next step, hence the question).