For those of you who use gelatin and keg, do you always transfer to a clean keg after the gelatin has done its thing? Im thinking of eliminating a step by simply adding the gelatin to my serving keg accepting that my first few pints from that keg might be cloudy.
I always gel my ales and lagers, never dark beers unless they are amber or like a dopplebock. As far as temperature goes with lagers I always ramp it up to 76-80 deg. F. for a day to allow the yeast to clean up, then crash it hard to 33 deg. F for at least 5 days. Right before crashing I do two things, remove the trub and yeast for harvesting, then remove the air lock or at least make sure to remove it from my sanitizer solution as it will suck it up with the change in temperature.For those of you who use gelatin and keg, do you always transfer to a clean keg after the gelatin has done its thing? Im thinking of eliminating a step by simply adding the gelatin to my serving keg accepting that my first few pints from that keg might be cloudy.
I usually do most of my brew work on week ends so I brew and put in primary weekend#1 then after a hydrometer check to ensure fermentation is complete I put in secondary weekend#2 and cold crash for 2 weeks. I get a second cake that is decent because the beer does fall clear. I dont use any finings. Weekend #4 I rack to a bottling bucket and then keg it (to remove the trub) and have it sit on gas for a week. Weekend #5 I am pulling a pint.
I know this may be longer than necessary but since I pull the beer off the cake there is no harm and its easy to remember what to do when. With my work schedule this works best for me as as long as it makes good beer I am fine with it![]()