Ok so i have read through many of the stickys and need some clarification. Feel free to comment on my procedure.
haha first off it took me 30 minutes to figure out how to change the pressure on my regulator. I felt like an idiot when i finally read a regulator description. Anyway. First kegging adventure last night...cleaned/sanitized etc...am I supposed to run both the cleaner and then the sanitizer through the liquid line to sanitize that as well? I did so I hope that is ok. I filled keg to 30 psi, let it sit for a few, hit the top with some iodophor solution to check for leaks.
so I filled it with beer, hit with a few 15 psi bumps that i bled off to evacuate o2. So now what to do...
I read about force carbing and "natural carbing". I ASSUME force carbing includes the fast shaking method that is fast but wastes co2, and also includes what I understand to be 'regular carbing' (there has to be a better name for this) where I simply determine the serving pressure i want based on a chart and the fridge temp, put it there, and wait a few weeks (somewhere around 12psi). Then there's natural carbing where I would you priming sugar or something.
So anyway I just did the regular carbing and the keg is sitting in my fridge connected to gas at 12psi.
questions:
1) This IPA needs to sit for a few weeks no matter what...did i make the right choice of methods?
2) What really is the difference between fast force carbing and 'regular' force carbing?
3) (off topic) what is cold crashing?
4) Once my keg is "pressurized" ( i assume this means when I don't hear gas moving through the regulator) do I need to keep my c02 tank at pressure and feeding the keg for the next 2 weeks while it ages, or should I remove pressure and just let the co2 in there do it's thing? If so how do I know I have enough? I just didn't read anywhere whether or not the tank should always remain connected to the keg even in the conditioning stage. In keeping it connected, am i wasting co2?
5) Is there ever a need to clean/sanitize the gas line connector and gas line itself?
haha first off it took me 30 minutes to figure out how to change the pressure on my regulator. I felt like an idiot when i finally read a regulator description. Anyway. First kegging adventure last night...cleaned/sanitized etc...am I supposed to run both the cleaner and then the sanitizer through the liquid line to sanitize that as well? I did so I hope that is ok. I filled keg to 30 psi, let it sit for a few, hit the top with some iodophor solution to check for leaks.
so I filled it with beer, hit with a few 15 psi bumps that i bled off to evacuate o2. So now what to do...
I read about force carbing and "natural carbing". I ASSUME force carbing includes the fast shaking method that is fast but wastes co2, and also includes what I understand to be 'regular carbing' (there has to be a better name for this) where I simply determine the serving pressure i want based on a chart and the fridge temp, put it there, and wait a few weeks (somewhere around 12psi). Then there's natural carbing where I would you priming sugar or something.
So anyway I just did the regular carbing and the keg is sitting in my fridge connected to gas at 12psi.
questions:
1) This IPA needs to sit for a few weeks no matter what...did i make the right choice of methods?
2) What really is the difference between fast force carbing and 'regular' force carbing?
3) (off topic) what is cold crashing?
4) Once my keg is "pressurized" ( i assume this means when I don't hear gas moving through the regulator) do I need to keep my c02 tank at pressure and feeding the keg for the next 2 weeks while it ages, or should I remove pressure and just let the co2 in there do it's thing? If so how do I know I have enough? I just didn't read anywhere whether or not the tank should always remain connected to the keg even in the conditioning stage. In keeping it connected, am i wasting co2?
5) Is there ever a need to clean/sanitize the gas line connector and gas line itself?