Until now my home brewing has been primarily bottle conditioned ale. I brewed a couple lagers, mostly just to say I brewed them. But for the most part, everything I brew, everything I read, and 99% of what I drink is ale. So when I do get the urge to brew a lager I have to go back to square one and start reading everything again - my memory sucks. So when I do get the urge to brew a lager I have to go back to square one and start reading everything again - my memory sucks.
I'm getting ready to brew a festbier this weekend. While trying to work out the fermentation I considered maybe buying a corny keg as a secondary. I've debated getting into kegging a few times but always manage to talk myself out of it, for a lot of reasons. Sometimes I think it would be nice to be able to keg (some) beers. My favorite beers (to brew and to drink) are still bottle conditioned ales. I only brew a handful of times a year to begin with and the majority of those brews will always be bottle conditioned ale - so it's been hard for me to justify the expense of getting into kegging just for those rare occasions when I would like to utilize that.
I have a 7 gallon Fermonster I use for primary fermentation. I rarely do a secondary, but when I did I had a 5 gallon glass carboy. Awhile back I read a thread on here about glass carboy horror stories complete with photos of stitches, blood, shards of glass and beer flooded rooms. I immediately got rid of my glass carboy.
Now I need something to do a lager in and was considering a corny keg. I was hoping some of you who brew lagers and also keg could shed some light on your process. Do I need two kegs? Do I need the airlock adapter thing? Can I do the secondary in the same keg I serve from? What exactly are the different functions of secondary fermentation vs bright tank? And can they be done in the same keg you eventually serve from? Part of my reason for wanting to get into kegging is for the forced carbonation aspect.
Thanks in advance
CHEERS!

I'm getting ready to brew a festbier this weekend. While trying to work out the fermentation I considered maybe buying a corny keg as a secondary. I've debated getting into kegging a few times but always manage to talk myself out of it, for a lot of reasons. Sometimes I think it would be nice to be able to keg (some) beers. My favorite beers (to brew and to drink) are still bottle conditioned ales. I only brew a handful of times a year to begin with and the majority of those brews will always be bottle conditioned ale - so it's been hard for me to justify the expense of getting into kegging just for those rare occasions when I would like to utilize that.
I have a 7 gallon Fermonster I use for primary fermentation. I rarely do a secondary, but when I did I had a 5 gallon glass carboy. Awhile back I read a thread on here about glass carboy horror stories complete with photos of stitches, blood, shards of glass and beer flooded rooms. I immediately got rid of my glass carboy.
Now I need something to do a lager in and was considering a corny keg. I was hoping some of you who brew lagers and also keg could shed some light on your process. Do I need two kegs? Do I need the airlock adapter thing? Can I do the secondary in the same keg I serve from? What exactly are the different functions of secondary fermentation vs bright tank? And can they be done in the same keg you eventually serve from? Part of my reason for wanting to get into kegging is for the forced carbonation aspect.
Thanks in advance
CHEERS!

Last edited: