homebrewdad
Well-Known Member
I periodically see posts of people trying various filters out when they funnel/rack/transfer their beer... and the vast maority of the time, these are accompanied by horror stories about clogged filters and/or clogged funnels, if not stories about spilled beer or oxidation worries.
My question is a simple one - why?
When I brew, I throw my pellet hops directly into the boil. No hop sock. No filter.
Naturally, there are a ton of "floaties" in the wort. Meh, who cares?
I don't scoop the final, solid chunks out of my kettle into the carboy, but I do make it a point to get all of the wort itself.
I'm guessing that people go to all of this filter trouble for the purpose of getting clearer beer... but so far, my beers have been extremely clear. I do let them sit for a while before I rack (I'm not a guy who pulls multiple gravity readings... I figure that this process is going to take a while), and I end up with nice, hard yeast cakes that politely stay behind when I rack the beer (even if I bump them with my autosiphon).
Am I missing something? Can I improve my beer with filtering?
My question is a simple one - why?
When I brew, I throw my pellet hops directly into the boil. No hop sock. No filter.
Naturally, there are a ton of "floaties" in the wort. Meh, who cares?
I don't scoop the final, solid chunks out of my kettle into the carboy, but I do make it a point to get all of the wort itself.
I'm guessing that people go to all of this filter trouble for the purpose of getting clearer beer... but so far, my beers have been extremely clear. I do let them sit for a while before I rack (I'm not a guy who pulls multiple gravity readings... I figure that this process is going to take a while), and I end up with nice, hard yeast cakes that politely stay behind when I rack the beer (even if I bump them with my autosiphon).
Am I missing something? Can I improve my beer with filtering?