That's what I have done in the past. This year, I might try adding to the keg and add a spunding valve.
I'm trying your method with blueberries tomorrow... and I have a batch planned for the weekend that I want to use some frozen mangoes.. so how much of it you usually add?I used to do that. I would put it into secondary and then add a blowoff tube. Now I simply wait until primary crashes and then add it to the carboy. It will become active for a couple of days and then settle back down. At that point it can go into secondary and you don't have all of that sediment. I have been using this method for a while now with no loss of fruit flavor in the beer. I recently did an Apricot Honey Ale that way and then Mango Honey Ale. The mango came out a bit subdued but excellent. The Apricot Honey Ale was on point and I didn't even use a full can of the puree. The Mango Honey Ale lasted just over 24 hours when I shared it with friends. Today I am going for a Strawberry ESB. Not sure what to expect as people say that strawberry comes out more subdued as a fruit flavor. But that is OK since I want the fruit to be a secondary flavor to the beer itself. I once poured a six pack of Sam Adams Cherry Wheat down the drain because it tasted like cough syrup. LOL.
I'm trying your method with blueberries tomorrow... and I have a batch planned for the weekend that I want to use some frozen mangoes.. so how much of it you usually add?
thanks for sharing.
I'm trying your method with blueberries tomorrow... and I have a batch planned for the weekend that I want to use some frozen mangoes.. so how much of it you usually add?
thanks for sharing.
So, if I'm getting this right, you added your puree to the primary - and then at some point racked to another vessel?
fwiw, I didn't need a blow-off on the secondary vessels. While they definitely kicked up with the fruit addition, it was quite tame...
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Cheers!
Thanks for posting your results. I do it both ways, I usually transfer off the primary yeast if I'm trying to save it for a re-pitch. I'm currently working on a peach/wheat ale (peaches evicted from the freezer because of COVID-19) that I was going to rack to secondary but now I'll just dump the peaches in and hope for the best.A bit surprised that nobody has commented on the substance of this post. I only recently started doing this and found the results to be just as good or better than siphoning the beer on top of the puree in the secondary.
You can teach an old dog new tricks. I have been brewing for over thirty years and only recently discovered this method. It's not always in a book. Sometimes you have to figure it out for yourself.
Thanks for posting your results. I do it both ways, I usually transfer off the primary yeast if I'm trying to save it for a re-pitch. I'm currently working on a peach/wheat ale (peaches evicted from the freezer because of COVID-19) that I was going to rack to secondary but now I'll just dump the peaches in and hope for the best.