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IPA getting dark during bottle conditioning

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I do secondary in a keg. I keep a slow trickle of co2 in the keg. From there - run a little trub out with a picnic tap. Can either force-transfer to a second keg or crack open, add priming sugar, purge, do a low level force carb and bottle. That method of bottling has yielded beers that don't darken appreciably and keep flavor longer
 
The more hops you use the more your beer is susceptible to oxidation. I only brew one beer that has more than eight ounces of hops, and that is the only beer I have issues with oxidation. I drink it quick to beat the oxidation effects.
 
I use the Cold Crash Guardian and collect CO2 during fermentation. Then I bottle from the fermenter, priming each bottle, and the CO2 provides enough back pressure to do about 36 12 ounce bottles before I have to loosen and let oxygen in. This is the best I can do without investing in equipment. It works well for me.
Just wanted to add to this. I used my cold crash guardian for the first time on my most recent batch. Fermented 4G of a dubbel in a 6.5G big mouth bubbler. I cant really cold crash, but I did manage to get my fermenter down to 50F in the brew room. With that soft crash, I still had enough fermentation gas to package a 1G ukeg and 22 of my 24 bottles. It worked really, really well and I will probably invest in a second one since I'm hoping to get back to having two batches going at the same time. Also being that I'm just starting to keg (2.5-3G kegs), it will have more than enough gas to get those batches transferred.
 
Just wanted to add to this. I used my cold crash guardian for the first time on my most recent batch. Fermented 4G of a dubbel in a 6.5G big mouth bubbler. I cant really cold crash, but I did manage to get my fermenter down to 50F in the brew room. With that soft crash, I still had enough fermentation gas to package a 1G ukeg and 22 of my 24 bottles. It worked really, really well and I will probably invest in a second one since I'm hoping to get back to having two batches going at the same time. Also being that I'm just starting to keg (2.5-3G kegs), it will have more than enough gas to get those batches transferred.
And I am also getting about 48+ bottles now that I have also invested in a stainless steel bottling wand.
 
Oh? I didn’t even realize that existed. I’m hoping to mostly get away from bottling. If you don’t mind taking the time, what other pros/cons do you have with the new wand?
 
Follow all your steps you have listed in your update.....my only humble suggestion would be to bottle in 25oz sparking wine bottles w/ little head space. This allow less O2 per volume.... as it ages it reduces the oxidation effects over a longer period of time. 99% of my IPA's are in 25oz bottles this made a huge difference for me.
 
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