Sudz
Well-Known Member
I just discovered something on crash cooling which may be of interest to the forum... It also may be obvious to everyone but me.
I have a freezer which I modified to use for crash chilling brews and wine I make. It works well and I typically strap the thermocouple to my carboy for measuring the temp at the bottle rather than the air temp of the freezer. This was actually recommended by someone as the best way to know the brew temp since the freezer temp tends to fluctuate with the freezer cycling.
The mass of the carboy and liquid change slowly which eliminates the more rapid cycling of the freezer when compared to measuring the air temp for control.
This has worked well for things I don't drop to far. However, I recently set up to crash cool 6 gal of wine to precipitate out the tartaric acid. You take the temp down to about 28 degrees F to do this.
I strapped my thermocouple to the carboy as usual. Here's what happened.
The freezer came on and ran over night as expected to drop the temp. However, since the mass of the carboy changes temp very slowly, my freezer maxed out at about 6 degrees F and sit there while the carboy cooled to my 28 degrees. Eventually the carboy reached the 28 and the cooling cycled off... but the freezer is at 6 degrees. It stays at 6 degrees since it's a good freezer and everything has been saturated at this temp. Now the carboy continues to chill even though the freezer cooling is off. This continues until the freeze point of my wine has been reached somewhere below the 28 degrees... and you guessed it, the wine began to freeze.
Now I caught this before the carboy broke but I expect the wine is lost.
Lesson: Don't use your carboy for the temp reference in a freezer system. I've continued this process with the thermocouple hanging in free air. Yes the freezer cycles more initially but the brew does reach and stabilize at the set temp without the undershoot freezing the bejesus out of things.
I don't even want to think how things would have turned out if I hadn't checked things when I did...
I have a freezer which I modified to use for crash chilling brews and wine I make. It works well and I typically strap the thermocouple to my carboy for measuring the temp at the bottle rather than the air temp of the freezer. This was actually recommended by someone as the best way to know the brew temp since the freezer temp tends to fluctuate with the freezer cycling.
The mass of the carboy and liquid change slowly which eliminates the more rapid cycling of the freezer when compared to measuring the air temp for control.
This has worked well for things I don't drop to far. However, I recently set up to crash cool 6 gal of wine to precipitate out the tartaric acid. You take the temp down to about 28 degrees F to do this.
I strapped my thermocouple to the carboy as usual. Here's what happened.
The freezer came on and ran over night as expected to drop the temp. However, since the mass of the carboy changes temp very slowly, my freezer maxed out at about 6 degrees F and sit there while the carboy cooled to my 28 degrees. Eventually the carboy reached the 28 and the cooling cycled off... but the freezer is at 6 degrees. It stays at 6 degrees since it's a good freezer and everything has been saturated at this temp. Now the carboy continues to chill even though the freezer cooling is off. This continues until the freeze point of my wine has been reached somewhere below the 28 degrees... and you guessed it, the wine began to freeze.
Now I caught this before the carboy broke but I expect the wine is lost.
Lesson: Don't use your carboy for the temp reference in a freezer system. I've continued this process with the thermocouple hanging in free air. Yes the freezer cycles more initially but the brew does reach and stabilize at the set temp without the undershoot freezing the bejesus out of things.
I don't even want to think how things would have turned out if I hadn't checked things when I did...