dracus
Well-Known Member
I've searched for high and low through the internet and here for a concise answer to my question. I seem to have as many different answers as I do questions.
I have some brand new kegs and my first attempt at kegging didn't come out at all like I wanted. I'm willing to give it some time to learn the finer points.
Here is what I did.
1. I took my beer two batches worth, and racked into clean, sanitized kegs.
2. I hooked up the co2 to room temperature beer, cranked it up to 30psi and shook/rolled the kegs for 10 minutes.
3. I put the kegs in the fridge, and lowered the co2 to 12psi, purged the keg to matching psi.
4. I tried the beer, 24 hours later and while I got a decent head the beer wasn't really carbed. Tasted good but not carbed.
5. I tried it again 36 hours later less foam but not carbed really either.
My questions are?
1. Whats the next step if I want this carbed more.
Everything I've read said I should be able to have carbed drinkable beer in 5 minutes. (assuming the beer is good to begin with)
2. Whats the proper serving pressure? Seems my lines being 2ft need to be longer or I have to serve at a really low pressure.
I was assured by the lhbs that the 10 minutes at 30psi would have the beer carbed up and ready to go in 24h or so.
Just trying to get a workable procedure here..Any advice or suggestions are more than welcome. So far kegging is NOT easier than bottling.
I have some brand new kegs and my first attempt at kegging didn't come out at all like I wanted. I'm willing to give it some time to learn the finer points.
Here is what I did.
1. I took my beer two batches worth, and racked into clean, sanitized kegs.
2. I hooked up the co2 to room temperature beer, cranked it up to 30psi and shook/rolled the kegs for 10 minutes.
3. I put the kegs in the fridge, and lowered the co2 to 12psi, purged the keg to matching psi.
4. I tried the beer, 24 hours later and while I got a decent head the beer wasn't really carbed. Tasted good but not carbed.
5. I tried it again 36 hours later less foam but not carbed really either.
My questions are?
1. Whats the next step if I want this carbed more.
Everything I've read said I should be able to have carbed drinkable beer in 5 minutes. (assuming the beer is good to begin with)
2. Whats the proper serving pressure? Seems my lines being 2ft need to be longer or I have to serve at a really low pressure.
I was assured by the lhbs that the 10 minutes at 30psi would have the beer carbed up and ready to go in 24h or so.
Just trying to get a workable procedure here..Any advice or suggestions are more than welcome. So far kegging is NOT easier than bottling.