Oxebar disconnects are very sensitive. If you put something in your keezer and it puts pressure on the gas line or disconnect, it can very quickly empty a 20lb CO2 canister by leaking out. DON'T DO THAT!!!
Bleach plus acid, like vinegar. I think it’s 2tbsp of each in 5 gal water will kill almost anything. There was an interview with one of the people who designed starsan and I believe he called it a “stone cold killer”If it's truly mold, you can knock it down with about :30 seconds of contact time with Clorox bleach, followed by a thorough rinsing, boiling (in fresh water), soaking in PBW, another thorough rinse, capped off with a StarSan soak.
It works wonders. So I'm told. Don't ask.
That interview was on Basic Brewing Radio I believe. Love that podcast.Bleach plus acid, like vinegar. I think it’s 2tbsp of each in 5 gal water will kill almost anything. There was an interview with one of the people who designed starsan and I believe he called it a “stone cold killer”
I really didn't want to dunk my bottles in that grasshopper green stew of copper salts, so the quart spray bottle was the stand-in for bottle sanitation.
Are you sure your dog didn’t walk by and lift a leg in that direction when you weren’t looking?Don't put anything copper in your batch of Starsan. I wasn't thinking today and put my copper tubing diy carboy siphon thingy that I use once in a bazillion years into the bucket of Starsan I just mixed up. A bucket normally lasts me a long time, but not this one. Down the drain it went. I really didn't want to dunk my bottles in that grasshopper green stew of copper salts, so the quart spray bottle was the stand-in for bottle sanitation.
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Sounds like - "you're gelling". Thought that was a good thing.One of my favorite sayings conveyed to me by an elderly gentleman decades ago is simply;
“There’s no education in the second kick of a mule!”
For those of you unfamiliar with Southern agricultural logic, it simply means that if you make the same stupid mistake again, (like walking up quietly behind a mule and surprising him), you can expect the same undesirable result as the first time, so there’s nothing new to learn in the second occasion that you didn’t learn in the first. However, some of us numbskulls seem to never learn!
I wanted to try adding gelatin to my keg and see if I can get a little cleaner beer. It’s never been a big deal to me since I typically drink dark stouts in a ceramic mug through the winter, and I often put my blonde ales in a thermal mug in the summer. But I did end up with an exceptionally clear beer back in the fall and decided that if I could replicate it without too much effort, it would be nice.
I had already injected priming sugar and ascorbic acid through the gas post back several weeks ago when I kegged this batch. I had checked the pressure and found that it had pegged the needle on my spunding valve as I moved it to the kegerator. I left it in there for a couple days to cool down thoroughly before adding the gelatin.
Today, I prepared my gelatin and drew it up into the large syringe and attached my ball lock connector. Now here’s where I went off course. This is the first time I’ve ever tried to inject anything into a keg that is already in the kegerator. I had to navigate the two kegs and two tanks and their associated lines to gain access to the gas post on my target keg. Once I had snaked it in their, I just popped it on. Did I pull the PRV to relieve the keg pressure first?? NO! Did I keep my hand on the back end of the plunger as I promised myself that I would always do?? NO!
So, as you may have guessed, I got kicked again!Yes that wonderful warm sticky shower as the plunger and all the contents of the syringe leave the back end of the syringe at high speed.
Maybe, just maybe, it takes me two kicks after all.![]()
Sounds like - "you're gelling". Thought that was a good thing.![]()
Mystery Brew!Made a small batch of cider so didn't label bottles just made my notes and stuck them in the six pack holder I put the cider in. Spotted one a couple of days ago, notes and holder missing. I really like it and have no idea what I did to it or how old it is to be able replicate it.Don't do that.
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They said "when you rack your wine, don't leave headspace."
Fine then.
I won't.
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That would make them "Reasonable Preparations" which explains why I don't have any.I would have drop cloths on the floor if I ever did that.
And the walls.
And the ceiling.
Would that make them Lift Cloths?
Dear Sufficient Cleaner,my ceiling and wall cleaning abilities to be sufficiently acceptable
Looks like that spray ball really works dandy...Don't start the 1/5 hp 1560 gpm submersible pump in your high tech keg washer without a keg present.
I've never had WY1318 climb up the walls like you're describing. But I've always been adding a drop of Fermcap-S per 1.5-1.8 liter starter when boiling. That seems to keep foaming down well enough.My latest "don't do that"... Don't make a starter of Wy1318 larger than 2L in a 4L flask. A 2.5L starter climbed right up and out of that and made a huge mess of my stir plate.
I've never found a need to use Fermcap with anything else, but I might have to keep some on hand for large 1318 starters from now on. And my starters are always at 67-70ºF in the brew room, never higher.I've never had WY1318 climb up the walls like you're describing. But I've always been adding a drop of Fermcap-S per 1.5-1.8 liter starter when boiling. That seems to keep foaming down well enough.
And the starters are always kept at room temps, around 72-74°F, rarely much higher.
Sad! I share kitchen space with other adults and my kids, but I use the sink for wort chilling. I have started covering up the pot with not only a lid, but also plastic wrap or a plastic grocery bag.I left my pot of starter wort in the sink, bathed in cool water to chill while we ate dinner. My lady told my son to rinse his plate. I came back to a pot sitting in a sink full of cloudy water and not sure if some may have seeped into my pot.
Don’t do that.![]()
Your son will grow up to be a Voter (if such a thing still exists then). This is a perfect learning opportunity: Next time you brew, include your son so that he can learn that there is much more to the world than that which is immediately obvious and often what we innocently do can have dire consequences we lacked the knowledge to forsee....Or: Install locked doors at brew-time and allow your son to grow up in blissful ignorance.I left my pot of starter wort in the sink, bathed in cool water to chill while we ate dinner. My lady told my son to rinse his plate. I came back to a pot sitting in a sink full of cloudy water and not sure if some may have seeped into my pot.
Don’t do that.![]()
Keep the extra plugs handy. They rarely fail, but if a mouse gets into the area where you keep your canning gear, it’s about the only thing on a pressure cooker he can chew on; and chew he will. I had to order a replacement plug a few years back when this happened to me.I now have 4 replacement overpressure plugs that I will never need or will probably lose before I need one.
Been there; done that! I now write on the packaging specifically what such things are for.You **will** keep those plugs.
Years from now, not today, not tomorrow, but none too soon somewhere in the rest of your life, you will come across them and have **NO** idea what they are, where they are used, what they are for.
Ask me how I know. Or rather, don't know.
Or take advantage of Amazon’s usual 30 day free return policy.Over the weekend, I decided to make a gallon of starter wort and can it in my pressure cooker for future use. Everything was going fine until the pressure cooker heated up and started leaking steam out of the overpressure relief plug. Having never paid much attention to the plug, I assumed that pushing down on it with an oven mitt on might seal it. What I didn't understand was that it is just a rubber plug that is inserted from the underside of the lid. So, when I pushed down on it, the plug fell into the pressure cooker with a blast of steam erupting from the now open hole in the lid. Obviously, I had to shut off the heat immediately.
Not wanting to waste a gallon of wort waiting to be canned, I jumped on Amazon, found replacement plugs and paid extra for overnight delivery first thing the following morning. Based on some quick Google research, it appeared that everything should be okay as long as I canned the jars within 24 hours of my first attempt.
The next morning, my Amazon shipment did not arrive. Now what? I then realized from my Amazon order that the overpressure plugs are just rubber plugs. So how could the original plug have failed in the first place?
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It then dawned on me that by pushing down on the original plug I probably pushed it out of the hole, and it was probably sitting inside the pressure cooker intact. It was! I simply pushed it back into the lid from the underside and proceeded to can the wort without issue. Of course, the new plugs were delivered shortly after I finished canning the wort. I now have 4 replacement overpressure plugs that I will never need or will probably lose before I need one.
I agree. In my world everything is in its place. The problem is its place is where it currently resides and I often don’t know where that is…. Until I buy a new one and go to put it away, in the same place I misplaced the old one.I envy you guys who have inhuman organizational skills, where everything is always in its place. At any one time I have one or two buckets in my garage containing random brewery parts, needing to be sorted into their correct homes. This almost never happens. The only small piece of equipment that ALWAYS goes where it belongs is the string loop I use to hoist the wilser bag after the mash; I've misplaced it too many times to count and don't have an extra handy. Twice I've had to fish it out from the yard waste bin after dumping spent grain. Yes, I could buy a roll of heavy nylon cord and make some extras, but that would require leaving the house.
Yes. Everything is always in its place. It's just that I usually can't remember where that place is.where everything is always in its place