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Golden Promise and flaked oats. Ella, Vic Secret, Galaxy, and Motueka. Barbarian Yeast
Yes exactly.
What % grist on that bad boy? Beautiful glow.
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/forum/threads/pressurized-closed-loop-corny-keg-fermenting.600563/Cool. I have been converting some of my keg line up into fermenters over the past year. I have two that I have been using for Saisons/Sours. Two that I have been using for Lagers. And, just got two ready to use for regular ales.
Basically, I have gradually been converting my recipes over from being designed for 6 gallons/SS brew bucket. I have been adjusting them to finish with 8 gallons of high gravity wort, and then I add the high gravity wort to pre-boiled water that I already have in my fermentation kegs. Generally, I have about .75-1 gallons of water already in the keg and dilute the beer back down..... So, I can do a single batch and end up with 2 kegs, each with 4.5 gallons of wort in them. Obviously nice because it allows for better transfers, spunding, and results in more beer as well.
This process has worked great for me in regard to lagers and saisons/sours. I need to start converting this IPA recipe over to that process next.
Are there any specific links on the Low Oxygen site related to using kegs as fermenters? Tips/Tricks/Design/Parts, etc....... That is basically why I started doing it in regard to lagers/spunding, etc.
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/forum/threads/pressurized-closed-loop-corny-keg-fermenting.600563/
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I just tapped my second keg of this. What a terrific beer, thanks again braufessor.
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Has anyone had success filling growlers from the tap with this style? I'm driving 8 hrs to visit the inlaws tonight and I'd like to bring a growler but given how sensitive these are to oxidation I'm hesitant. Going to tree house with my brother in law tomorrow and I'd love to do a side-by-side.
Cool. I have been converting some of my keg line up into fermenters over the past year. I have two that I have been using for Saisons/Sours. Two that I have been using for Lagers. And, just got two ready to use for regular ales.
Basically, I have gradually been converting my recipes over from being designed for 6 gallons/SS brew bucket. I have been adjusting them to finish with 8 gallons of high gravity wort, and then I add the high gravity wort to pre-boiled water that I already have in my fermentation kegs. Generally, I have about .75-1 gallons of water already in the keg and dilute the beer back down..... So, I can do a single batch and end up with 2 kegs, each with 4.5 gallons of wort in them. Obviously nice because it allows for better transfers, spunding, and results in more beer as well.
This process has worked great for me in regard to lagers and saisons/sours. I need to start converting this IPA recipe over to that process next.
Are there any specific links on the Low Oxygen site related to using kegs as fermenters? Tips/Tricks/Design/Parts, etc....... That is basically why I started doing it in regard to lagers/spunding, etc.
I counter pressure fill Growlers all the time without a CO2 Purge but filled to the top as much as possible and cap on foam and I've never had a problem even storing up to a week
I don’t know if it would be something you would want to try but last 2 IPAs I made I served straight from the keg I fermented in (with a float dip tube). The last one took 8 weeks to drink, I’ve never had an IPA stay that fresh for that long, no off flavors. I dry hop on day 3 and spund, keeps O2 to an absolute minimum.
@jakturner Tell me more please. I have clear beer draught draft in all my kegs and am planning to try this. Was planning 6gal batch split across three kegs to try different dryhops & yeast. Original plan was first dryhop on day three, jump to secondary purged keg on day four with second dryhop and spund - kinda like @schematix LODO method referenced above. If I can get away with all in one - sign me up!
Did you double dryhop?
Spund for natural carb? - I really want to accomplish this.
How do you put a screen over the pick up with the clear beer draught system? The pick up is already floating on top, you still find it useful with a screen over it?
Did you purchase your limit on all of those?$$$$View attachment 564155
Julius on he left and Bright w/galaxy on the right. Also came home with doppleganger, alter ego, bright w/Simcoe & Amarillo, eureka w/Nelson, and old man.
Oh no. That would have been over $400. I bought a little under half the max allotments.Did you purchase your limit on all of those?$$$$
View attachment 564155
Julius on he left and Bright w/galaxy on the right. Also came home with doppleganger, alter ego, bright w/Simcoe & Amarillo, eureka w/Nelson, and old man.
7 days 4 hours grain to glass. Naturally carbonated and cold conditioned.
Holy hops Batman wow does this beast pop.
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I do 2-3 days in primary (drop them about 24 hours post pitch) and then second drop in the keg which I keep in there. Since we're spunding, keg is carbed and ready in a day or two after racking. So about a week total timeline
So im curious. Are you dry hopping from day 1? Or leaving hops in the fermenting keg and racking off? Doesnt seem like much contact time if youve already racked and conditioned. Whats the timeline look like?
I don't temp control the keg so let it get to low 70s.never any diacetyl developing in the keg?
The last one I did I racked to a keg the“old school” way from my spigot, but with 6 pts left. It’s been three weeks in the keezer and the hoppiness is still there. I racked it on day 4, left it to condition/carb for a week at room temp, keezer for a day, tapped. It will probably be my process from here on because of not having a clogged poppet during a closed transfer.I dry hopped just under 3 days after pitching, and racked to the serving keg 4 days and 7 hours post pitch with about 2 gravity points remaining. Dry hops had contact time of a little over a day.
The hoppyness is off the charts.
Julius is my favorite by far. Eureka is the only one below 5%, and it's very good also.what’s the best? what is the lowest ABV beer that still tastes good?
Julius is my favorite by far. Eureka is the only one below 5%, and it's very good also.
I had just made a batch of braufessors recipe here and it came out great with a soft mouthfeel and big hop flavor. Its really fantastic. But the mouthfeel of these tree house beers is something else entirely.
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The screen is specifically made for the clear beer system and is sold on their website. I can’t speak to how useful it is because Ive never not used it. I bring kegs to gatherings a lot (sentiment gets kicked up) and use FC intertap faucets that can clog easy from hop particles, so for me it was worth the extra money. Plus transferring or serving off dry hops means I can get as much beer as possible at the bottom of the keg without getting a glass full of hop particulate. I know the keg it’s kicked when the beer stops flowing because the pick up is sitting in the muck down in the bottom and the screen is clogged up.
Idk. I ferment in a keg. I use the CB system in my fermentation keg then I jump it to a 3 gallon keg with normal dip tube. The beer coming over is completely free of debris, I imagine if you end up transferring hop material it would clog up that screen from the inside.Do you transfer into the keg closed, with the screen already on? I need to keg a couple neipas this weekend and will be my first time using the floating diptube. I bought the screens with them, but was wondering if use the screen when transferring to the keg will i get floaters in the wrong side of the screen giving me issues later? Wondering if you or anyone else had any advice. Thanks.
Went with full golden promise for the first time, had 1lb of unopened Eureka! for like 6 months in the freezer... needed to try this instead of simcoe...
Just made the dry hop when the beer was at 1.025 (3 days of fermentation)
Will post result in 2 weeks.
Cheers