Old_mil_guy
Well-Known Member
After really cleaning the corny and replacing every oring, how about dropping a campden tablet in before transfering beer?
The only thing I haven't done so far is to attempt to sterilize with boiling water, bleach and water solution, or steam/ autoclave (to which I have no idea how to accomplish it even if I wasn't afraid it would render the attached rubber/ plastic completely useless).
Just for the record, kegs are autoclavable! Some rubber tops get softer than others temporarily while hot, but I've not had a problem doing this. Once they cool I've had no issues with the handles - or poppets, or any seals.
I'd give a serious look to everything you use, not just the kegs, in your search for the source of contamination.
Speaking of the sulfer/sweet taste, that may be because the pitching temp is too high. It lowers the amount of yeast cells from developing and start to cause the cells to produce a lot of waste that cannot be eaten up later in the conditioning phase because they spent too much time early in the initial pitching trying to eat sugars instead of dividing like they are supposed to. Try pitching at a lower temp and let it gradually come up to the desired temp. The yeast cells will then be able to acclimate to the environment, divide into a ton of healthy cells which will be important later when they are able to eat much more complex sugars and waste products from earlier cells.
A couple things to ponder on:
If it really does taste like vinegar, the metabolic pathway that turns alcohol into acetic acid is an aerobic one. Depending on various degassing methods many vintners have a tendency to aerate their wines to some extent post primary, but this rarely turns said to vinegar. Acetobacter / Mother of vinegar is basically on everything and is extremely tolerant of low PH, thats why wine makes use sulfates and not starsan in their sanitation processes. Acetobacter shouldn't ruin a beer unless it's severely oxidized. If you're force carbonating with bottled CO2 and purging all the air out of the keg before hand, it's unlikely to be acetobacter.
If it doesn't taste like brett or lacto, you could consider the possibility that the steel of your keg has become porous somehow and is leeching out some nastiness that it dissolved during storage. The fact that the flavor comes out gradually and cleaning and sanitizing doesn't fix the two out of three that are effected could point to leeching.
After really cleaning the corny and replacing every oring, how about dropping a campden tablet in before transfering beer?
If you cleaned it that well it has to be getting contaminated prior to going into the keg. Maybe a gas line or gas disconnect is contaminated.
Man.. all the talk of this cleaning makes me feel like I'm some chump in cleaning my kegs. I've never had a problem *knocks of wood*.
I empty a keg, and keep it in the keezer usually, unless I REALLY need the room for something waiting. When I have time, I'll degas it.
I rinse it all out with the water hose, get the cake out of the bottom and the hop debris from dry hopping in there.
I'll heat up the water kettle, and get some hot water in there, with the PBW. Shake it around.. Generally, there's nothing to scrub, so I don't bother. I'll wipe down the posts and clean the top of the keg when I remove the label of what it is.
Shake that, hit it with a tiny bit of gas. Will hook up my tap lines, and run them through with the PBW, to clean them, and the dip tube. Dump it, hit it with more hot plain water to flush. Repeat dispensing process.
Rinse it with cold water... Leave some in there, and add some star san.. Shake it around and let it sit.. run it through the dip tube via gas, and dump it all before I put more beer in there.
Seems simple enough, and no real issues.
Any chance some beer back flowed into your co2 tank or regulator? And now it's dispensing some skanky co2?
Ah, the good old days...
What's really killing me is the two out of three kegs. If it's a true problem outside of the kegs then it should have popped up in that last keg by now (more than six months and about 9 batches already!). I've shared the same sanitation practices with all three kegs and associated tubing. That's why I can only conclude that it is the kegs somehow that are the cause and replacing them the solution.
Beer isn't being pressurized back into the line but is rather being sucked in due to the differential pressure occurring, only when I initially pressurize or dispense I'm guessing since I see no other way this would occur.
From what I know of check valves, they only work when the pressure on the opposite side of the source (in this case, the keg with beer) is greater, to protect the source (the gas source).
What I'm saying is that a check valve may stop most of the problem I seem to be having with beer entering the line, but it cannot stop it all because the pressure can equalize between the line and the keg; this still allows beer dispersed by the introduction of gas to pass by a check valve.