So I got home last night from a 4 day business trip and wanted to pour myself a beer. I go to my keezer, pull the tap for a honey orange wheat, and it shoots out at much higher pressure than normal and is all foam. "That's Weird" me thinks.... So I try pouring from a different tap, and while it doesn't come out with as much pressure, it's still not right... And then I realize that the glass is still warm even though it's half full. So I check my temp controller, and it's reading 93 degrees
So instantly I panic and think that the compressor in the keezer has gone bad. After a few moments to calm myself down and regain some rationality, I looked back at everything I had done on Sunday before I left... I had an Octoberfest lager that I had been lagering in a secondary fermenter in my fermentation fridge that I kegged on Sunday before I left. The fridge happens to be plugged into the same outlet as my keezer/temperature controller and I unplugged the fridge on Sunday because there was nothing in it anymore. So I think I must have accidently unplugged the temp controller as well, causing it to reset.
I'm guessing the reason it got up to 93 in the keezer is because of the 2 small fans I have running inside, I'm guessing their motors throw off a small amount of heat, that after 4 days was able to raise the temp. So my lingering question now, is all of my beer shot after cooking at 93* for 4 days, especially my lager that I've been waiting on for almost 3 months?
I'm guessing the reason it got up to 93 in the keezer is because of the 2 small fans I have running inside, I'm guessing their motors throw off a small amount of heat, that after 4 days was able to raise the temp. So my lingering question now, is all of my beer shot after cooking at 93* for 4 days, especially my lager that I've been waiting on for almost 3 months?