Nyxator
Well-Known Member
I had this exact problem, with harsh bitter tasting beer after it was kegged. I would transfer the beer from secondary and it would be great, then as soon as I drank some from the keg a couple weeks later, it was horrible.
I found the problem to be dirty poppets in the beer line tank plug. I bought my keg from a questionable LHBS and I could not get the poppets out of the plugs to save my life, so I just soaked them as is, and that turned out to be a bad idea.
Try this as an experiment. Taste the beer out of the keg by popping off the top and ladling out some beer. Then taste it by pouring it normally. Is there a difference? At least that will eliminate some possibilities. I found out my beer in the keg still tasted great, and completely different than the stuff coming out of the tap.
I do take my kegs apart and clean them completely after every brew. I'm willing to bet it's your poppets. If it is, take them out of the tank plug, and boil them in a pan. That helped, but didn't fix my problem. It only went away when I replaced my bad poppets.
Hope this helps.
I found the problem to be dirty poppets in the beer line tank plug. I bought my keg from a questionable LHBS and I could not get the poppets out of the plugs to save my life, so I just soaked them as is, and that turned out to be a bad idea.
Try this as an experiment. Taste the beer out of the keg by popping off the top and ladling out some beer. Then taste it by pouring it normally. Is there a difference? At least that will eliminate some possibilities. I found out my beer in the keg still tasted great, and completely different than the stuff coming out of the tap.
I do take my kegs apart and clean them completely after every brew. I'm willing to bet it's your poppets. If it is, take them out of the tank plug, and boil them in a pan. That helped, but didn't fix my problem. It only went away when I replaced my bad poppets.
Hope this helps.