JasonWB
Active Member
- Joined
- Oct 16, 2014
- Messages
- 34
- Reaction score
- 3
Hey guys,
I don't have any more room in the kegerrator at the moment, but have a beer that is about to get finished and put into a bright keg for serving. It will be sitting and aging for a few weeks though before I'm ready to serve it around Christmas. I have a second co2 tank and regulator setup and was thinking about going ahead and using that to force carb it now at room temp so that it just has to be chilled before serving and it will be ready to go. I understand the calculators, but beersmith says it will take 26.2psi for the beer to carb properly at 70 degrees. My question is how long should it be left at that pressure at 70 degrees? If I need a beer quickly and it's in the kegerrator, normally I just crank up the pressure to around 30psi for a few days testing it along the way and then serve at standard 10-12. Should I take the same approach and leave the warm keg at ~26 for 2-3 days and then drop the pressure or just keep it at 26 for a few weeks? That seems like I would wind up way overcarbonated? If I can make this work, I will be doing it from now on to always have drinkable beer ready to tap so I appreciate any help. Let me now if something there doesn't make sense.
I don't have any more room in the kegerrator at the moment, but have a beer that is about to get finished and put into a bright keg for serving. It will be sitting and aging for a few weeks though before I'm ready to serve it around Christmas. I have a second co2 tank and regulator setup and was thinking about going ahead and using that to force carb it now at room temp so that it just has to be chilled before serving and it will be ready to go. I understand the calculators, but beersmith says it will take 26.2psi for the beer to carb properly at 70 degrees. My question is how long should it be left at that pressure at 70 degrees? If I need a beer quickly and it's in the kegerrator, normally I just crank up the pressure to around 30psi for a few days testing it along the way and then serve at standard 10-12. Should I take the same approach and leave the warm keg at ~26 for 2-3 days and then drop the pressure or just keep it at 26 for a few weeks? That seems like I would wind up way overcarbonated? If I can make this work, I will be doing it from now on to always have drinkable beer ready to tap so I appreciate any help. Let me now if something there doesn't make sense.