hlmbrwng
Well-Known Member
I dry-hopped an IPA in a keg and refrigerated right away. After 6 days, I removed the hops, which will suspended in a paint strainer bag.
As I expected, after letting sit for a day, the first couple of pours were full of hop material. Then it cleared up.
I decided to bottle some of the beer. The keg was pressurized at about 14 psi (i don't have the fridge super cold). I released the pressure, set the pressure to 2 psi, filled the bottles, then set the pressure back to 14 psi.
The next morning, there was a lot of hop material again at the bottom of the keg. Why is this?
The last IPA I dry-hopped, by the time I got to the end of the keg, there was a ton of hop material. So, in this case, did depressurizing then resetting the pressure of the keg cause the floating hop material to drop?
Next time I might just add to secondary without a strainer, then rack of the hops. I was trying to cut down time by force carbing while dry-hopping.
As I expected, after letting sit for a day, the first couple of pours were full of hop material. Then it cleared up.
I decided to bottle some of the beer. The keg was pressurized at about 14 psi (i don't have the fridge super cold). I released the pressure, set the pressure to 2 psi, filled the bottles, then set the pressure back to 14 psi.
The next morning, there was a lot of hop material again at the bottom of the keg. Why is this?
The last IPA I dry-hopped, by the time I got to the end of the keg, there was a ton of hop material. So, in this case, did depressurizing then resetting the pressure of the keg cause the floating hop material to drop?
Next time I might just add to secondary without a strainer, then rack of the hops. I was trying to cut down time by force carbing while dry-hopping.