electricd7
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- Nov 19, 2012
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I did my first homebrew stout on Easter and just got a tank filled with beergas (75% NO2, 25% CO2) and hooked it all up. I have my kegerator at 40 degrees, 10ft of beerline (always been great with Co2 beers) and set my regulator to 30psi. I have a Krome stout tap on the other end. The beer came out FAST and was mostly foam....I turned it down to 20PSI and purged the keg and let it recharge, again came out really fast. I am new to the stout taps as well and pulled it all the way forward. I could slow it down by not pulling as forward, but have always opened the Perlick taps all the way for my normal ales. What *should* I be doing to get the creamy stout experience I am after? Thanks in advance!
ED7
I did my first homebrew stout on Easter and just got a tank filled with beergas (75% NO2, 25% CO2) and hooked it all up. I have my kegerator at 40 degrees, 10ft of beerline (always been great with Co2 beers) and set my regulator to 30psi. I have a Krome stout tap on the other end. The beer came out FAST and was mostly foam....I turned it down to 20PSI and purged the keg and let it recharge, again came out really fast. I am new to the stout taps as well and pulled it all the way forward. I could slow it down by not pulling as forward, but have always opened the Perlick taps all the way for my normal ales. What *should* I be doing to get the creamy stout experience I am after? Thanks in advance!
ED7