I'm doing 2 dry hop additions. One in primary and second in keg. I try to do the primary dry hop while I still have 5 points of gravity or so to scrub any O2 introduced during the addition. Sometimes my work schedule does not permit and I dry hop at final gravity. I'll add a bit of boiled sugar water when that happens. I cold crash in the primary, sealing it first to prevent oxygen from getting in during cold crashing.
The keg hops go in after I fill the keg. I purge the keg by pushing out star san with CO2. Then fill with closed transfer. Then open keg and drop in my hops, loose. I'm using the clear beer draft system with the screen so no need to worry about bags. When all my clear beer systems are in use I use a stainless tea ball but that limits the dry hop quantity I can use.
After closing the keg back up I seat the lid with 30 PSI and give it about 5 purges then hook up to either high pressure CO2 for beer tomorrow or serving pressure CO2 for beer in a week or 10 days.
I believe the open lid dry hopping is safer than it sounds. Because I cold crash pretty soon after primary fermentation my beer goes into the keg with a fair amount of naturally produced CO2 dissolved. The dry pellet hops create many nucleation sites which cause some of this dissolved CO2 to come out of suspension. So when I purge I am purging with new CO2 in the head space and released CO2 from the beer. Anyway it seems to work well and my hop character is lasting just fine.
The keg hops go in after I fill the keg. I purge the keg by pushing out star san with CO2. Then fill with closed transfer. Then open keg and drop in my hops, loose. I'm using the clear beer draft system with the screen so no need to worry about bags. When all my clear beer systems are in use I use a stainless tea ball but that limits the dry hop quantity I can use.
After closing the keg back up I seat the lid with 30 PSI and give it about 5 purges then hook up to either high pressure CO2 for beer tomorrow or serving pressure CO2 for beer in a week or 10 days.
I believe the open lid dry hopping is safer than it sounds. Because I cold crash pretty soon after primary fermentation my beer goes into the keg with a fair amount of naturally produced CO2 dissolved. The dry pellet hops create many nucleation sites which cause some of this dissolved CO2 to come out of suspension. So when I purge I am purging with new CO2 in the head space and released CO2 from the beer. Anyway it seems to work well and my hop character is lasting just fine.