DonGavlar
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Nov 7, 2017
- Messages
- 196
- Reaction score
- 68
So with all my beers thus far I've just used finings in the boil and then given lengthy ferm times and cold conditioning times.
I've been quite happy with my beers but still never had a really super clear beer that I'm happy with.
So, now that I've got a ferm chamber set up, I wanted to start cold crashing my beers followed by a dose of gelatin. I figured with boil finings, quick cooling times, 3 weeks in the fermenter, a week cold conditioning and now a cold crash followed by gelatin too, that surely I'd have a good chance of some really nice clear beers.
I was reading up on proper cold crashing techniques to only discover a large amount of people suggesting that..
1) Im going to oxidise my beer from the air being sucked by vacuum
2) My glass fermenter will EXPLODE
I've realised it's obviously better to just keg and cold crash under pressure but I don't have a kegging system and wont have one for some time.
How much truth is in the whole oxidisation theory? I feel that so many people cold crash in the fermenter, surely people would have stopped by now if oxidisation was an issue? And will my glass fermenter really break under the pressure from just a 30F drop or so?
Any advice would be appreciated, I feel that now I have the oxidisation thing in my head im going to think I'm picking up on oxidized off flavours when they aren't really there.
I've been quite happy with my beers but still never had a really super clear beer that I'm happy with.
So, now that I've got a ferm chamber set up, I wanted to start cold crashing my beers followed by a dose of gelatin. I figured with boil finings, quick cooling times, 3 weeks in the fermenter, a week cold conditioning and now a cold crash followed by gelatin too, that surely I'd have a good chance of some really nice clear beers.
I was reading up on proper cold crashing techniques to only discover a large amount of people suggesting that..
1) Im going to oxidise my beer from the air being sucked by vacuum
2) My glass fermenter will EXPLODE
I've realised it's obviously better to just keg and cold crash under pressure but I don't have a kegging system and wont have one for some time.
How much truth is in the whole oxidisation theory? I feel that so many people cold crash in the fermenter, surely people would have stopped by now if oxidisation was an issue? And will my glass fermenter really break under the pressure from just a 30F drop or so?
Any advice would be appreciated, I feel that now I have the oxidisation thing in my head im going to think I'm picking up on oxidized off flavours when they aren't really there.