StophJS
Well-Known Member
Posting this will make me seem entirely incompetent, but I hope that doing so will help others avoid the mistake that I made tonight. Maybe someone can tell me there is still a chance my beer will turn out as well. Tonight I racked my second batch ever to a 5 gallon better bottle for secondary. It's a BB Holiday Ale and had been in primary for two weeks. I used an auto-siphon for the very first time, and that's where the trouble comes in. If anyone is planning on using an auto-siphon, do not make the mistake that I made and think that the black cap on the bottom of it is just a cover and not part of the device itself. I attempted to rack without this, and given that I had orange peel bits aplenty in primary (didn't have the sense to strain on boiling day), the beer is most likely ruined now either from oxidation or contamination. As I was siphoning, the uncapped bottom of the auto-siphon became clogged with orange peels about 4 or 5 times, causing me to have to restart about 5 times, and stupidly pump air directly into my beer a couple times in the process as I tried to restart. Every time the siphon would clog, the auto-siphon would begin sucking in air around the seal and I ended up with about half the siphon full of air bubbles. Ultimately once the beer was too low to begin the autosiphon again, I took the hose off and restarted the siphon with my mouth (using listerine first as a feeble attempt to salvage the whole disaster). Clogged again. This time I placed a handheld kitchen strainer over the primary end of the hose and managed to get the rest of the beer without touching the beer directly with my hands. By this time however, the damage had been done and feel I have thoroughly oxidized my beer and possibly contaminated it. Moral of the story, when using an auto-siphon, don't be stupid like me and think the cap on the end should come off. Also, when making a spiced ale, strain on boil day and potentially save yourself a big headache as well.