radwizard
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- Oct 7, 2015
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You can do that (pull it out after the initial active ferm is finished), but at some point this could be a headache. You're gonna end up with more finished beer in your keezer then you think (seems most ppl wish they would of bought a bigger keezer). You can pull out beer and carboys to make this work for the occasional stout or porter, but doing this as a main practice seems pretty tough to schedule.
Keg conditioning instead of force carbing could help you with your scheduling.
If you are carbing on gas you will be calculating for co2 volumes based on time and temp in the keezer which could be a pain if you are changing the temp often.
Long story short. Sometimes you may want to use your keezer as a ferm area, if so do some careful planning and go for it, but if you dont need to do it at all, then don't. That's what I'd recommend...
Keg conditioning instead of force carbing could help you with your scheduling.
If you are carbing on gas you will be calculating for co2 volumes based on time and temp in the keezer which could be a pain if you are changing the temp often.
Long story short. Sometimes you may want to use your keezer as a ferm area, if so do some careful planning and go for it, but if you dont need to do it at all, then don't. That's what I'd recommend...