I still stick by my 10% number. The poll is flawed. This forum draws OCD enthusiasts, and polls draw them too.
There's a whole world of brewers out there, and they aren't cold crashing. Go check out the Mr. Beer forum if you don't believe me. This guy has 10,000 posts there and is considering cold crashing to clear his beer. If you are reading this post, you are infected.
BassBeer said:I've been doing it with my last 10 batches or so. It's incredibly easy as long as you have the equipment, clears the beer of all the dryhop particles, most yeast, and gives me a head start on carbing since it's already cold when it hits the keg. Love it!
Next experiment for me is to cold crash before I dry hop to see if I perceive any better flavor/aroma extraction. I've read that any yeast still in suspension will coat hop oils and take them away when they settle to the bottom. Anyone tested this? Think I'll try it with the 10gallon batch I just brewed.
it's a means of getting yeast and anything else is suspension (proteins, dry hops etc) to drop out of suspension quickly
it's particularly helpful for low flocculating yeast strains or getting pellet hops to sink before racking
Since there was no option for "sometimes" I voted "no."
shelly_belly said:I rack into a keg with a shortened dip tube then cold crash, carb and serve.
BassBeer said:Next experiment for me is to cold crash before I dry hop to see if I perceive any better flavor/aroma extraction. I've read that any yeast still in suspension will coat hop oils and take them away when they settle to the bottom. Anyone tested this? Think I'll try it with the 10gallon batch I just brewed.
Yes. Most homebrewers bottle way too much yeast. The amount of yeast in each bottle of SNPA is something to aspire to.
BassBeer said:I've been doing it with my last 10 batches or so. It's incredibly easy as long as you have the equipment, clears the beer of all the dryhop particles, most yeast, and gives me a head start on carbing since it's already cold when it hits the keg. Love it!
Next experiment for me is to cold crash before I dry hop to see if I perceive any better flavor/aroma extraction. I've read that any yeast still in suspension will coat hop oils and take them away when they settle to the bottom. Anyone tested this? Think I'll try it with the 10gallon batch I just brewed.