decanting from one bottle into another

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martinworswick

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i have some brews that i would like to enter into a competition,mainly for the professional feedback but the bottles the beers are in are currently to big,i'm thinking of pouring them into smaller bottles for the comp, it also happens that these beers are overcarbed for style.

anyone tried this before? am i wasting my time?

cheers
martin
 
I would think you'd lose way too much carbonation pouring from one to another. Maybe it'll work out since you said it was overcarbed as it is. I'd make sure and refrigerate both bottles first and get them really cold to limit foaming as much as possible.
 
i have some brews that i would like to enter into a competition,mainly for the professional feedback but the bottles the beers are in are currently to big,i'm thinking of pouring them into smaller bottles for the comp, it also happens that these beers are overcarbed for style.

anyone tried this before? am i wasting my time?

cheers
martin

It works fine. Cold bottles, cold beer. I can do it with almost no foam. Hold the receiving bottle nearly horizontal as long as you can and go slow. Cap on foam.
 
or if you can, siphon/pump them to smaller vessels, just to avoid oxidation potential.
 
When you enter a contest, you want to be entering the beer in the best state possible. There's really no easy way to move beer from one bottle to another that wouldn't perhaps risk oxydation.

There will be other contests, and other beers to enter. And if you want to enter this recipe, then brew it again in time for the next contest.

And in the future, for every batch you bottle, bottle at least a sixer in plain, unmarked 12 ouncers. that way come contest time you will have bottles that you can enter, without having to worry about stuff like this.

We get threads like this all the time, and I don't get why folks would even consider messing with something like this....The point of a contest is to enter your beer in it's best condition possible. Not to do something that could oxydize or infect your beer, just in the hopes that it will turn out "ok."

The point of entering contests is to be judged by experts and experts can and will pick up any flaws in your beer.

So really, you don't want to do something that could render your beer in less than stellar or pristine conditions.

There are a million contests, and most of them are on an annual basis...this won't be the only contest, nor will it be the only batch of beer you make...

It's funny. this is the only hobby I have come across where people would try something like this before submitting their heart and soul to a panel of judges.......I mean you don't hear a painter say, "I want to enter my canvas in a contest, the rules say it can be no bigger than 8 x 10, mine's 9 x 12, so I guess I need to get out an exacto blade and cut my painting down to size."

Talk about cutting corners. ;)

If it ain't gonna be perfect, then don't bother......Don't try to compromise...you would be surprised at what the judges can pick up on.

There will be plenty more in your brewing career. :mug:
 
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