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Gelatin Use for clarity!!

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ShowPonyBrewing

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I haven’t used gelatin yet to improve beer clarity but I’d like to and was wondering how to properly use it? I’ve heard some different ways so wanted to get a majority opinion.
 
I haven’t used gelatin yet to improve beer clarity but I’d like to and was wondering how to properly use it? I’ve heard some different ways so wanted to get a majority opinion.

Really easy, hard to screw up. The following is for a 5g batch.

  1. Add half a packet of unflavored gelatin (Knox?) to a cup of water. Let it sit for a few minutes. The gelatin will absorb water and swell ("bloom").
  2. Give it a quick stir with a spoon, then microwave for a minute. It doesn't have to boil, but you must get it over 105F to melt the gelatin, and at least 150F to fully pasteurize it.
  3. Pour into carboy! Don't need to wait for it to cool (I don't).
It's probably best to cold crash your carboy as cold as possible (e.g., 32F) BEFORE adding the gelatin. After adding the gelatin, it's going to be fairly clear in just a day or two. I usually give it 3 days. The trub should be packed pretty hard on the bottom of the carboy.
 
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That’s awesome. I’ve got it pretty clear with just cold crashing, but wanted to see how much difference there is with gelatin. Thanks a lot.
 
1/2 teaspoon of gelatin in 1/4 cup of water is all you need for 5 gallons.

Add gelatin to cold water, let it "absorb" for a few seconds. Put it in the microwave for roughly 30 seconds max. Check the temp every 7-10 seconds while stirring it (I use the temp probe to stir) until it reaches 160°. Dump it into beer that has been cooled below 50°. That's it!
 
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1/2 teaspoon of gelatin in 1/4 cup of water is all you need for 5 gallons.

Add gelatin to cold water, let it "absorb" for a few seconds. Put it in the microwave for roughly 30 seconds max. Check the temp every 7-10 seconds while stirring it (I use the temp probe to stir) until it reaches 160°. Dump it into beer that has been cooled below 50°. That's it!

Will the above procedure work for clearing Cider also?
 
Is pectin the same as gelatin?

Quick Google search:
Pectin is a water-soluble fiber located in the cellular walls of fruit. Apples, grapes, cherries and citrus fruits like lemons and grapefruit have a high concentration of pectin, while pears and peaches have a low level. Commercial pectin products come as a powder or liquid and often contain citric, lactic or fumaric acid to aid gelling. By contrast, gelatin is a protein typically obtained from the collagen of beef bones, connective tissue and pig or fish skin. Unsweetened gelatin is a colorless, flavorless powder and contains no additional ingredients.

Powdered pectin supplies 162 calories in each single-use, 1.75-ounce packet, while unsweetened gelatin powder has 94 calories per packet. Gelatin is an excellent source of protein, with approximately 24 grams in each ounce, an amount that supplies over 42 percent of the daily protein requirement for men and 52 percent of that for women. It does not contain any fiber or carbohydrates, while pectin is high in both with 45 grams of total carbohydrates and 4.3 grams of fiber in every packet. The amount of pectin in fresh fruit is not measured separately from other types of soluble fiber. Pectin is also higher in sodium than gelatin.
 
Related question: Has anyone ever tried adding gelatin to a keg through the CO2/IN post? Same concept as jumping a keg-- but the gel/water mix would be in one keg and get pushed to the beer keg. This assumes the CO2 dip tube is short. I guess the only difficulty here would be measuring the amount of gel/water added.

I just finished a big brewing cycle to stock up for the summer. Not brewing again until the fall. I've got 10 full kegs and I think most would benefit from gelatin before being submitted to a competition in July. So I'd need about 40oz water. Perhaps I'll put gel solution in the keg and dispense with a picnic/cobra tap to gauge the amount put in each beer.

Not trying to unnecessarily complicate things but I have a lot of gelling to do! It would have been a lot easier to add gel when I kegged last week. Live and learn...
 
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Related question: Has anyone ever tried adding gelatin to a keg through the CO2/IN post? Same concept as jumping a keg-- but the gel/water mix would be in one keg and get pushed to the beer keg. This assumes the CO2 dip tube is short. I guess the only difficulty here would be measuring the amount of gel/water added.

I just finished a big brewing cycle to stock up for the summer. Not brewing again until the fall. I've got 10 full kegs and I think most would benefit from gelatin before being submitted to a competition in July. So I'd need about 40oz water. Perhaps I'll put gel solution in the keg and dispense with a picnic/cobra tap to gauge the amount put in each beer.

Not trying to unnecessarily complicate things but I have a lot of gelling to do! It would have been a lot easier to add gel when I kegged last week. Live and learn...
I was thinking of trying this too. I am fermenting a beer in a keg and will be jumping it to a purged keg when it finishes. I want to use gelatine but I am trying to completely eliminate oxygen from the cold side and can’t think of any other way to add gelatine. I was thinking of attaching a funnel to the blow off tube and pouring it in. I think inevitably this will still introduce some oxygen to the keg though.
 
I’ve adding gelatin to one keg thru the CO2 port. No problem but keep your hand on the plunger (I used a syringe). It’ll come back at you if the keg is under even a little bit of pressure.
 
I simple heat 100mL of water to 65'C (one minute in microwave), pour one tsp of unflavored gelatin and, with strong stirring, pour to fermenter and lightly stir beer several times.

That is all!

And work without cold crash. Reduce and chill haze, but significantly cleans beer from the remains of yeast.
 
If you want to attempt a zero oxygen way, you can mix up a solution and completely fill up some tubing with it. You can have MFL flares on each end of the tubing. You'd probably need to mix up a decent size batch and fully submerge the tubing in it. You could also use some suction to pull the liquid through the tubing. Once the tubing is completely full of gelatin solution and no air pockets, attach a gas ball lock to one end and a source of CO2 to the other end. Turn up the CO2 source to a psi greater than your keg. Then connect the gas ball lock to the keg gas post and push in the gelatin solution.

Each foot of 3/16" tubing holds 0.027612 cubic inches so you'd need about 65 inches to hold 1 ounce. For 1/4" tubing, you'd need about 37 inches to hold 1 ounce.
 
If you want to attempt a zero oxygen way, you can mix up a solution and completely fill up some tubing with it. You can have MFL flares on each end of the tubing. You'd probably need to mix up a decent size batch and fully submerge the tubing in it. You could also use some suction to pull the liquid through the tubing. Once the tubing is completely full of gelatin solution and no air pockets, attach a gas ball lock to one end and a source of CO2 to the other end. Turn up the CO2 source to a psi greater than your keg. Then connect the gas ball lock to the keg gas post and push in the gelatin solution.

Each foot of 3/16" tubing holds 0.027612 cubic inches so you'd need about 65 inches to hold 1 ounce. For 1/4" tubing, you'd need about 37 inches to hold 1 ounce.
That sounds like more wrk than it’s worth. I might just skip the gelatine this time.
 
I'm actually going to add gelatin to a beer tonight. I'm going to pop off the PRV on the keg lid, use a meat injector to push the solution in, close it up, and purge the heck out of it. I figure for the few seconds the PRV is off, there shouldn't be a ton of oxygen getting in.
 
Just because brulosophy tasting participants couldn’t distinguish a difference in the beer doesn’t mean that the beers weren’t different. Anyway I am trying it as an exbeeriment of my own. I think also the amount of time that a beer sits in a package after being oxidized is where the difference will show.
 
I found a stainless steel spice/marinade injector that holds 4oz (<$20) to use for adding gelatin through the gas post. Planning to place a regular CO2 disconnect on the gas post with a very short piece of vinyl siphon tube attached, then stick the injector in the tube. Should work as long as the head pressure is negligible and/or the release valve is open.
 
I found a stainless steel spice/marinade injector that holds 4oz (<$20) to use for adding gelatin through the gas post. Planning to place a regular CO2 disconnect on the gas post with a very short piece of vinyl siphon tube attached, then stick the injector in the tube. Should work as long as the head pressure is negligible and/or the release valve is open.

Where were you able to find a 4oz injector? Seems like 2oz is the common max size when I look. 4oz would be an ideal size.
 
I just open the keg and turn the gas on while adding the gelatine. I figure if I'm constantly blowing O2 out then no oxygen can get in.
 
And I'll just add that, as discussed elsewhere on HBT, you can take it down below 32F when cold crashing since it's beer at that point. Charts can be found, but for reference, if you're cold crashing a 5% ABV beer, it won't freeze until 29F, 7.5% freezes at 27.4F, and 10% at 25.7F.

It's only a few degrees, but if cold crashing works better the colder it is, then why not? (unless you've got non-alc stuff in the same freezer, of course!). Also you want to make sure when you're down that far that your temperature probe is at the bottom of the freezer.
 
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