Turfgrass
Well-Known Member
do all beer need cold crashing or just certain styles of beer? thanks in advance.
This.I would highly recommend not cold crashing unless you have a reliable way to seal your fermenter from oxygen ingress.
You don't refrigerate all your beer at some point?I usually don't cold crash. Maybe that's what's wrong with my beer...![]()
You don't refrigerate all your beer at some point?
So your still cold crashing. Only difference is the sediment left behind is in your serving vessel rather than left behind in the fermentor. cheersWhen I'm ready to drink it. I bottle condition, but my "beer fridge" is always full, of several beers AND of other stuff.
No. Cold crashing is a practice prior to setting the carb in the beer. An there is another difference. This person also has decreased the risk of oxygen absorption. Unless you are using a closed system or at the very least purging your vessel with Co2, cold crashing increases your risk for oxygen exposureSo your still cold crashing. Only difference is the sediment left behind is in your serving vessel rather than left behind in the fermentor. cheers
What's the difference between crashing before carbing vs after carbing? I've got zero experience bottle conditioning. Does the sediment not fall to the bottom of a carbed bottle the same as it does a carbed keg. Prior to switching to the unitank I used to end up with some sediment in the bottom of my kegs when I rushed a batch. It was terrible as the minute you moved the keg it would stir it all up and make the beer cloudy. I guess if for some odd reason you choose to leave the fermentor open while crashing you might pick up oxygen but I can't see any reason you would choose to do it that way. Seems more likely to pick up oxegen transferring from the fermentor to bottle then during the cold crash. CheersNo. Cold crashing is a practice prior to setting the carb in the beer. An there is another difference. This person also has decreased the risk of oxygen absorption. Unless you are using a closed system or at the very least purging your vessel with Co2, cold crashing increases your risk for oxygen exposure
What's the difference between crashing before carbing vs after carbing? I've got zero experience bottle conditioning. Does the sediment not fall to the bottom of a carbed bottle the same as it does a carbed keg. Prior to switching to the unitank I used to end up with some sediment in the bottom of my kegs when I rushed a batch. It was terrible as the minute you moved the keg it would stir it all up and make the beer cloudy. I guess if for some odd reason you choose to leave the fermentor open while crashing you might pick up oxygen but I can't see any reason you would choose to do it that way. Seems more likely to pick up oxegen transferring from the fermentor to bottle then during the cold crash. Cheers
I agree with your point about crashing in a open fermentor but still can't see why anyone would do it that way purposely unless there using a bucket that can't be sealed up with gas I guess. My point was more that unless your shaking up a bottle of beer prior to pouring rather than gently pouring your still cold crashing your beer imo. Cold crashing to me is chilling the beer which causes it to clear/drop out regardless of which vessel you choose to do it in. I think a better way to say it would be "I don't cold crash in the fermentor but in the bottle" just as kegging people say they prefer to crash in the keg. In the end it's just semantics lol. CheersNo. The pre carb/carb has nothing to do with sediment or clarity. I was only speaking on oxygen exposure, which my arguement geared around.
As the beer in your fermenter cools it creates negative pressure, a vacuum. This suck in air through the air lock until it is equalized; oxygen gets in. Hence why I also stated “unless you have a closed system”. so If you have a stainless fermenter or a thicker gauge food grade plastic fermenter that can handle the change of pressure and if you have the the ability to purge your fermenters with c02 then my comment doesn’t pertain to you, which it wouldn’t since you stated you have a unitank.
Now why I replied to your comment in the first place is because you stated that the person is still cold crashing by storing it cold after they bottle but this is not considered cold crashing. The process of coldcrashing happens prior to the beer being carbed/placed in its final serving vessel. They are similar don’t get me wrong But I was just clearing up for anyone reading. Then I just continued with what I had to say for people who may not have the same quality of homebrewing equipment as you or myself. Giving them the best option. Because if they don’t have the ability to coldcrash in a completely closed vessel, it would be better For them to fine with an alternative method like using whirfloc, gelatin, and a high flocculating yeast strain.
A bucket or carboy and simple airlock or blowoff is the problem, which is like 95% of homebrewers.I agree with your point about crashing in a open fermentor but still can't see why anyone would do it that way purposely unless there using a bucket that can't be sealed up with gas I guess. My point was more that unless your shaking up a bottle of beer prior to pouring rather than gently pouring your still cold crashing your beer imo. Cold crashing to me is chilling the beer which causes it to clear/drop out regardless of which vessel you choose to do it in. I think a better way to say it would be "I don't cold crash in the fermentor but in the bottle" just as kegging people say they prefer to crash in the keg. In the end it's just semantics lol. Cheers
True although a balloon is literally the only thing holding a person back from crashing in the carboy. No way I'd be willing to deal with all the negatives for the cost of a balloon. CheersA bucket or carboy and simple airlock or blowoff is the problem, which is like 95% of homebrewers.
Yep, but sadly not as utilized as it should be.True although a balloon is literally the only thing holding a person back from crashing in the carboy. No way I'd be willing to deal with all the negatives for the cost of a balloon. Cheers
Thanks, that balloon idea seems a good option for the average homebrewer like me.This.
Unless you are under positive CO2 pressure, you will either pull air, or pull a vacuum. Air is safer but bad for beer. Can't think of a single fermenter design (including stainless) where I would be comfortable with the negative pressure pulling a vacuum. In fact I've heard the cringe-inducing tsssst of a combo PRV/anti-vac allowing air in to a sealed cold crashing conical that wasn't under pressure.
With something that can hold pressure, put it under a couple PSI of CO2 before you cold crash. (Alternatively, spund it).
The homebrew trick for doing this without a pressure capable fermenter (ie bucket or carboy) I've seen is to replace an airlock with a balloon towards the end of fermentation. Let the balloon inflate with CO2, so that when you crash that CO2 gets drawn back in instead of air. Done sanitarily, obviously.