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Is secondary necessary when kegging?

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earwig

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Feb 18, 2010
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New Jersey
I searched a bit but I'm on my phone and it doesn't work very well so forgive me if this has been asked/answered before. I want to begin kegging and I'm wondering if you folks find it necessary or beneficial to secondary and/or cold crash when kegging. Thanks.
 
Some do secondary and some do a combination of both. It's not necessary, but it depends on how much you want the clearest beer possible. I have done primary only with no secondary and no crash cool and had good results.
 
No, as long as you have good racking procedure. If you rack a bunch of gunk and hops it's possible. Just primary and let it clear and settle. Then rack to a bottling bucket and then to a keg. I have even had luck racking from primary to keg and skipping the bucket as long as it's pretty clear to start with.
 
I'm pretty anal about cleaning and sanitation. Most people just run cleaner and sanitizer through the keg and let it squirt through the poppits and refill. I remove the posts and poppits and scrub them, pull the dip tubes and brush them out each time the keg kicks. As far as o-rings, I check them for signs of cracking and as long as they sealed on previous keg, I clean and sanitize, re-lube. But thats just me.
 
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