lots of pictures or it didn't happen.
Next time I make it down I will take a panorama for you all
lots of pictures or it didn't happen.
I recently took some co-workers several lagers I brewed, one of which was a Czech Amber session lager about the color of Shiner Bock. 3.4% alcohol and 100 calories.
One told me how thick and alcoholic that beer was and how she got a buzz after just a few sips. I explained that it had less alcohol and the same calories as Miller Lite. I could see the blank look in her eyes as I explained it.
That did not compute--she was unable to understand that a brown colored beer wasn't motor oil.
I love to watch the faces when I float the "heavy, dark, strong Stout over the clear, light APA most still don't believe that the APA is 3% higher.
hoppz said:american beer (non-craft etc.) is like makin love in a canoe,
its f#c%in close to water!
oh whoops and one more labatt gem
"COMMERCIAL DESCRIPTION
John Labatt Classic was introduced in 1983 as Canadas only national domestic premium beer. It is Krausen-brewed (slow, low temperature with a secondary fermentation process) and has a longer cold-aging process. Classic uses all-malt and a unique blend of western-grown North American hops, providing a smooth, full flavour product with a true malt taste that is slightly sweet."
krausening = slow, low temperature and a secondary fermentation. why would you need a "secondary fermentation" if you are just injecting it with CO2 and bottling it?
oh whoops and one more labatt gem
"COMMERCIAL DESCRIPTION
John Labatt Classic was introduced in 1983 as Canada’s only national domestic “premium beer”. It is Krausen-brewed (slow, low temperature with a secondary fermentation process) and has a longer cold-aging process. Classic uses all-malt and a unique blend of western-grown North American hops, providing a smooth, full flavour product with a true malt taste that is slightly sweet."
krausening = slow, low temperature and a secondary fermentation. why would you need a "secondary fermentation" if you are just injecting it with CO2 and bottling it?
Some of the big breweries do use krausening to carbonate their beers, not sure if Labbatt's is/was one of them, but it has happened
On a Cream ale.......... This is a Pilsner lager cuz it's yellow and fizzy not dark and foamy like an Ale is.
Some of the big breweries do use krausening to carbonate their beers, not sure if Labbatt's is/was one of them, but it has happened
I remember some beer ads years ago talking about it, I think it was Old Style.
...It is Krausen-brewed (slow, low temperature with a secondary fermentation process) and has a longer cold-aging process...
krausening = slow, low temperature and a secondary fermentation...
But it seems like the marketing department F'd up in their understanding of it and made a funny claim to sound flash when really they probably don't know anything about the actual process - and of corse who would ask a brewer to proof read their claims before they get printedSome of the big breweries do use krausening to carbonate their beers, not sure if Labbatt's is/was one of them, but it has happened
At a party near one of the BMC plants, I overheard a drunk BMC employee explaining that there were only three types of beer,
"Lagers, as in Bud, Pilsners as in Miller, and ales as in Sam Adams. Stouts are just stouts - not beer, same goes for IPA's."
Some peoples stupidity never ceases to amaze me. Stouts & IPA's not beer?!:smack:
But it seems like the marketing department F'd up in their understanding of it and made a funny claim to sound flash when really they probably don't know anything about the actual process - and of corse who would ask a brewer to proof read their claims before they get printed![]()
yeah, the key thing here is that "slow and low temperature fermentation" isn't krausening lol.
i follow some ancient brewering like old style perhaps krausening, but i guess they must have suctioned off the sediment somehow. can't imagine labatt doing it though
wailingguitar said:Carbonated beer can still be filtered, so that isn't an issue. Krausening and spundig were especially popular techniques due to their efficiency. With krausening you have the advantage of not having to use an outside CO2 source, which saves money. With spundig, you have the added advantage of being able to turn beers over quicker. Both processes are very practical and economical on the large scale
I would think you would lose some co2 unless you raised the pressure higher than your intended pressure, had the pressure at your intended pressure on the finished side of the filter, and had a reliable way to slowly release pressure as the beer transfers into the finished keg.
pjj2ba said:I believe they fully carbonate the beer naturally, and then use external CO2 to push is through the filters, otherwise a lot of the CO2 would be removed by the filtering process. So technically, it is naturally carbonated, BUT they do use extra CO2 to replace any that is lost/prevent it from being lost, during the filtering process
Bud/Light is krausened