MakoMadness
Member
First post on the forum. First off I wanna thank the people on here and the admins. I have been reading posts for weeks getting ready to start home brewing and all the information has really helped. That being said I'm a little lost and could use some basic guidance.
After reading all kinds of views and posts I think I'm gonna go with the following general system. Is it a good idea?
Primary (7 gallon bucket), secondary (5 gallon better bottle), keg, then poss bottle.
I would like to end with a personal beer but with a professional presentation - sediment free. I know different beers will require different fermenting/conditioning times but my hope is by purging my secondary,keg and bottles with co2 I can avoid oxygendation while moving around so much.
I know the forum is somewhat divided on secondaries but my thinking is the secondary will help clean the beer, as well as allow me at add flavor. But once fermenting is done, I would like to keg it to age/carb.
This is the main area where I get lost. My idea is to store the kegs in my basement at room temp say 60-70. I don't understand though for heavier beers that talk about months of conditioning, should I be adding just a little co2 to purge the oxygen then letting it sit. Or am I better off carbing over several weeks then disconnecting from the co2 and letting it sit for months.
Btw I want to age in the keg cause I don't want glass carboys for safety reasons and I'm also not a big fan of liquid sitting that long in a plastic container. My thinking was with a keg it's a dark no oxygen environment which should be perfect to age in.
I do plan on bottling some of the beer, tho once again am I better off carbing in keg then bottling then ageing or ageing in keg, carb then bottle?
My final question to this long post is serving from a keg. Am I better off leaving the keg out at room/outside temp and using one of those systems that cools through steel/copper tubing ( I believe that's how bars do it right?) or do I build/use a kegorator keeping the beer cold till gone. Would keeping the beer warm mean that if I only finish half the keg I can disconnect it put on a different flavor and save the half keg for another time maybe months away?
In the end I would like to have many different beers available to drink not being forced into drinking what's on tap till gone.
Thanks ahead of time, I'm sure I'll have more questions as I venture forward.
After reading all kinds of views and posts I think I'm gonna go with the following general system. Is it a good idea?
Primary (7 gallon bucket), secondary (5 gallon better bottle), keg, then poss bottle.
I would like to end with a personal beer but with a professional presentation - sediment free. I know different beers will require different fermenting/conditioning times but my hope is by purging my secondary,keg and bottles with co2 I can avoid oxygendation while moving around so much.
I know the forum is somewhat divided on secondaries but my thinking is the secondary will help clean the beer, as well as allow me at add flavor. But once fermenting is done, I would like to keg it to age/carb.
This is the main area where I get lost. My idea is to store the kegs in my basement at room temp say 60-70. I don't understand though for heavier beers that talk about months of conditioning, should I be adding just a little co2 to purge the oxygen then letting it sit. Or am I better off carbing over several weeks then disconnecting from the co2 and letting it sit for months.
Btw I want to age in the keg cause I don't want glass carboys for safety reasons and I'm also not a big fan of liquid sitting that long in a plastic container. My thinking was with a keg it's a dark no oxygen environment which should be perfect to age in.
I do plan on bottling some of the beer, tho once again am I better off carbing in keg then bottling then ageing or ageing in keg, carb then bottle?
My final question to this long post is serving from a keg. Am I better off leaving the keg out at room/outside temp and using one of those systems that cools through steel/copper tubing ( I believe that's how bars do it right?) or do I build/use a kegorator keeping the beer cold till gone. Would keeping the beer warm mean that if I only finish half the keg I can disconnect it put on a different flavor and save the half keg for another time maybe months away?
In the end I would like to have many different beers available to drink not being forced into drinking what's on tap till gone.
Thanks ahead of time, I'm sure I'll have more questions as I venture forward.