blacklab
Well-Known Member
Anyone else ever tried this?
Today I was bottling a brew that had some dryhopping going on in the secondary. So I rack to the bottling bucket, then look at the poor hops just sitting there on the bottom of the Better Bottle. 'Hmmm. I have that other IPA in primary just waiting to move over to a secondary. I'll bet those hops in there still have some life'.
So I racked my IPA into the 'used' secondary, and added my new dry hops to the 'used' secondary with the 'wet' dry hops.
I was crazy about sanitization as ever, so I'm thinking risk of introducing infection is low, plus I've got 4 oz of hops in there doing what they do.
I will probably lose some beer to the trub that was left from the previous brew-but there wasn't much goo on the bottom and figured I'd give it a shot and see what happens.
Only negatives I can see are; some mixed in flavor from the previous beer, and infection.
Today I was bottling a brew that had some dryhopping going on in the secondary. So I rack to the bottling bucket, then look at the poor hops just sitting there on the bottom of the Better Bottle. 'Hmmm. I have that other IPA in primary just waiting to move over to a secondary. I'll bet those hops in there still have some life'.
So I racked my IPA into the 'used' secondary, and added my new dry hops to the 'used' secondary with the 'wet' dry hops.
I was crazy about sanitization as ever, so I'm thinking risk of introducing infection is low, plus I've got 4 oz of hops in there doing what they do.
I will probably lose some beer to the trub that was left from the previous brew-but there wasn't much goo on the bottom and figured I'd give it a shot and see what happens.
Only negatives I can see are; some mixed in flavor from the previous beer, and infection.