• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

gelatin finings?

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Trust me:
  • I use a Tbs per five gallons
  • I let the powder sit for 10 minutes to slightly dissolve.
  • I heat the mix over medium heat for about 5-7 minutes until the gelatin completely disappears...never letting it boil.

If you do this, it will work just fine.

I am struggling with chill haze and have read 40 or more posts about gelatin just to get the quoted instructions

I think this post is really valuable, so I am bringing it back. Simple instructions that are too the point, Thank you!
 
How does this work when doing it into a bucket with a spigot on it? Will it freeze up all the yeast and trub and still let me rack from the bucket to a keg?
 
How about adding gelatin to a beer that has jalapenos in it and is still in it's primary carboy? I am of the lazy brewers school that wants to enjoy the brewing process without worrying about transferring to secondaries and tertiaries if at all possible. I know it's not hard, I just have a limited amount of carboys and it's always a logistical nightmare trying to time everything just right for the moves.
 
It will but it depends on the amount of yeast and trub you have. If your layer is too high it may cause you problems when racking. I'd much rather rack to bottling bucket after doing gelatin and then bottling out of it
 
I gotta figure out how to get this plastic dip tube to work and I won't have to worry about using the spigot I guess.
 
You can always use the gelatin at bottling time. Sometimes, the yeast/protein will tend to clump on the sides of the bottle if you do this. Unsightly, but it doesn't really change anything clarity wise once the beer is poured.
 
Is biermunchers method done to beer that has been cooled or can it still be at around room temp? Does one work better then the other?
 
Is biermunchers method done to beer that has been cooled or can it still be at around room temp? Does one work better then the other?

The gelatin will work much faster if the beer is cold. It will work at ale fermentation temperatures but will take longer, about five days. Crash cooling is a good technique in general but really works well in combination with the gelatin. The cheapest/easiest way to start crash cooling is to set the carboy/bucket in a cube cooler or keg tub with ice.
 
Sounds good. I'll throw it in my kegerator for a day so it cools down nicely.
 
+25

One of the best threads I've read to date. I've just added gelatin for the first time tonight. Did as many have directed, boil, cool, add, rest, pour... I used ~1 tsp for my 5 gallon batch of Boston Lager clone. It was already pretty clear but I want it perfectly clear. Added the fining to my keg and racked onto it. Can't wait to see the results.
 
Hold long do you usually let the secondary sit with gelatin in it before you bottle or keg?
 
Hold long do you usually let the secondary sit with gelatin in it before you bottle or keg?

If the beer is already cold then I only leave it 24 hours max, though it usually clears up overnight.

If the beer is room temperature I give it 3-5 days.
 
So I used the gelatin for the first time and had some questions. Mine was floating at the top when I went to rack the beer. Is that ok or did I not get it cold enough?

When I poured it into the beer I didn't mix it around or anything. Would that cause it not to work right?
 
Well you need to dissolve it first! :D

You'll want to get about a cup of water on the stove and add the gelatin to it. Then get it hot but not boiling. Boiling the gelatin will denature it and it will become useless. Once it's fully dissolved let it sit for 30 minutes to let the gelatin "bloom", then add it to the bottom of a secondary vessel and rack your beer on top of that. The whirlpool action from swirling will ensure it's properly dispersed throughout all of the liquid.
 
I did all of that to the t. Followed biermunchers post.

I didn't swirl it into the beer just poured it in.
 
Oh well you should be fine then. It'll probably just take a bit longer for the gelatin to start sinking. Once it does it will start dragging everything down with it :mug:
 
I let it sit for over a day and just decided to rack.

Guess I have to let it sit longer next time.
 
Does the first pull from a keg ever have gelatin in it? I would think that the amount of gelatin settling to the bottom would get sucked up into the tapped beer.

Also, I like to do the roll and carb method when I first throw a keg into the fridge. Could that cause the gelatin to flow around and get caught up in the dip tube or in the top of the keg or will it just drop down before it has a chance to turn into full jello?
 
If I ever use gelantin, I disolve it in 180 degree water for several minutes to sanitize, then put 50% cold water in solution thereafter before using. Seemed to work fine many times.
 
OK, trying to figure this cold-crash/gelatin thing. I have a cream ale I cold crashed on 3/27. 0n 4/1 I dissolved 1 tsp gelatin in 1 cup hot tap water, let sit 25 minutes, then brought up to 180 degrees, then cooled to about 90 degrees, then poured into the beer. today 4/5, it seems to be a nice jelly-like layer floating on the top of my beer now. If I give the carboy gentle nudge it start to have that lava lamp effect. Did I do something wrong or does it just need more time?

Sould I try the gelatin again?
 
OK, trying to figure this cold-crash/gelatin thing. I have a cream ale I cold crashed on 3/27. 0n 4/1 I dissolved 1 tsp gelatin in 1 cup hot tap water, let sit 25 minutes, then brought up to 180 degrees, then cooled to about 90 degrees, then poured into the beer. today 4/5, it seems to be a nice jelly-like layer floating on the top of my beer now. If I give the carboy gentle nudge it start to have that lava lamp effect. Did I do something wrong or does it just need more time?

Sould I try the gelatin again?

Boil the water, not the gelatin -180 is too hot for the gelatin. Bring the water to a boil, let it cool a bit, dissolve the gelatin in the water, let it bloom and cool for a few minutes, pour it into the beer.
 
Boil the water, not the gelatin -180 is too hot for the gelatin. Bring the water to a boil, let it cool a bit, dissolve the gelatin in the water, let it bloom and cool for a few minutes, pour it into the beer.

OK, sounds like a good method. I'll try it.

Any ideas what to do about the floating goo?
 
Somewhat old thread, but I have to post my results because I'm so impressed with the gelatin trick. Had two half-or-so batches, one a honey blonde and one a mild, both with wicked haze. The blonde was so opaque, it looked like paint. One packet of gelatin, dissolved in 1 cup of 180 water into each keg, three days later, and you can read through the blonde. No real noticable change in the mild though.

Before:
gelatin1.jpg


After:
gelatin2.jpg


Close up of the blonde:
gelatin3.jpg
 
Just an fyi, using a full packet of gelatin is way to much. You can really strip off aroma and even flavor with that much, ask me how I know. The commercial stuff I use only calls for 1/2tsp per 5 gallons. It doesn't take much.


_
 
Back
Top