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I love this method. But I have found that I maintain better carbonation and "think" that I get better co2 flushing via foam if I bottle at 10-12psi. You do have to keep a pretty steady hand on the stopper and I use tub to catch the beerfall. In the tub I put a coffee can to support my bottle at a comfortable height so I can work the on/off with my right hand and work the stopper with the left hand.
I generally spill about one to two bottles worth of beer in one corny keg worth of filling.
 
What's the best way to cut the racking cane at a 45 degree angle? A fine tooth hacksaw blade?
 
...and "think" that I get better co2 flushing via foam if I bottle at 10-12psi. You do have to keep a pretty steady hand on the stopper and I use tub to catch the beerfall....

A method I use is to go ahead and use the 4-5 PSI, then top off each bottle just a bit. Then I place caps on each bottle and before I crimp them, I give each bottle a quick tip on its side and back upright (hold the cap on of course) to cause the beer to start foaming up. Then on goes the capper (loosely) and when I hear/see foam coming out of the cap, I crimp it down.
 
I'm looking at making one of these (someday). I had a thought on the air chuck side. Harbor Freight carries these:
Harbor Freight Tools - Quality Tools at the Lowest Prices

Basically a tire inflator with a bleed valve. I've seen them on sale for about 1/2 price. I was thinking of permanantly attaching it to the inflating needle then you can just use the button to bleed off pressure.
 
I have read about this and thought it was pure genius... Then, I made one using a carboy stopper which sits on top of the bottle.

Beyond genius!

With this trick, and the rolling portable "kegerator" which is built now for parties, Biermuncher is my hero! And, congrats on the recent article!

I have some beer I need to send you. Bravo!
 
So I've just bottled some of BierMuncher's OktoberFAST ale from the keg using the BMBF. I plan to give this brew away as Christmas gifts. I am wondering whether or not I can store the bottled beer at room temperature for a while. I'm an apartment dweller and don't have room to store this beer in the fridge for an extended period of time. Basically, what kind of shelf life will this bottled brew have if it isn't refrigerated?
 
So I've just bottled some of BierMuncher's OktoberFAST ale from the keg using the BMBF. I plan to give this brew away as Christmas gifts. I am wondering whether or not I can store the bottled beer at room temperature for a while. I'm an apartment dweller and don't have room to store this beer in the fridge for an extended period of time. Basically, what kind of shelf life will this bottled brew have if it isn't refrigerated?

If you had complete and thorough fermentation before kegging and chilling, your shelf life is indefinite. I have bottle in the basement that are 10-14 months old and regularly stock my fridge with those.

If you rushed your beer into kegs and then chilled, racking the beer back into to bottles and then storing at room temp can kick up some residual fermentation and cause the beer to get over carbonated over time. I speak from experience. :(

So if you're patient with your fermentation process and you give the ber plenty of time to condition at room temp, bottle storage at room temp is no problem...even over many months.
 
If you had complete and thorough fermentation before kegging and chilling, your shelf life is indefinite. I have bottle in the basement that are 10-14 months old and regularly stock my fridge with those.

If you rushed your beer into kegs and then chilled, racking the beer back into to bottles and then storing at room temp can kick up some residual fermentation and cause the beer to get over carbonated over time. I speak from experience. :(

So if you're patient with your fermentation process and you give the ber plenty of time to condition at room temp, bottle storage at room temp is no problem...even over many months.

This was the OktoberFAST ale. It spent 2 weeks in primary and 2 weeks in secondary prior to kegging. The OG was 1.056 and the FG was 1.011, for 80% attenuation, fermented with WLP001 Cali Ale yeast. I think it attenuated fully, especially given the extra 1/2 pound of Carapils in the grain bill. Hopefully overcarbonation in the bottles will not be a problem.

Thanks for your reply, BierMuncher!
 
made mine last saturday and bottled 30 munich madness sunday in about 45 minutes.
only lost 1/2 bottle of beer.
thanks bm!
 
What's the best way to cut the racking cane at a 45 degree angle? A fine tooth hacksaw blade?

I just used the racking cane I broke the week before. I could not get the hose off and it broke at about a 45 degree angel, all be it a little rough around the edges.

I love mine. Used it to bring Cran-Cider to Thanksgiving dinner.
 
I've done this a couple of times thanks to Bobby's video. Saw it on you tube before I found this place. Lots of great info here btw.

Question is this: I bottled 20 beers tonight to clear a keg out of the kegerator. The beer i bottled was a little more carbed than the norm. 2 of the bottles kept pushing the caps off before I capped them. Should I worry about bottle bombs?

Rob

edit - I did put them in my deep freeze/fermenter with temp set at about 35-38.
 
I've done this a couple of times thanks to Bobby's video. Saw it on you tube before I found this place. Lots of great info here btw.

Question is this: I bottled 20 beers tonight to clear a keg out of the kegerator. The beer i bottled was a little more carbed than the norm. 2 of the bottles kept pushing the caps off before I capped them. Should I worry about bottle bombs?

Rob

edit - I did put them in my deep freeze/fermenter with temp set at about 35-38.
Nah. That's normal.

It's actually a good thing. If escaping CO2 managed to push off the caps, it also managed to push out any Oxygen that might cause your beer to go stale after an extended period of time. I actually give my bottles a good tip before capping to cause some intentional foaming. Then when the foam is seeping out of the loose lids, I crimp them down.

Always cap on foam to make sure you're not locking in any O2.
 
A method I use is to go ahead and use the 4-5 PSI, then top off each bottle just a bit. Then I place caps on each bottle and before I crimp them, I give each bottle a quick tip on its side and back upright (hold the cap on of course) to cause the beer to start foaming up. Then on goes the capper (loosely) and when I hear/see foam coming out of the cap, I crimp it down.

Once I get the beer to the top of the bottle, remove the racking cane/bottling tube and try and fill it the rest of the way, I get pretty much all foam. Any suggestions?

Rob
 
Once I get the beer to the top of the bottle, remove the racking cane/bottling tube and try and fill it the rest of the way, I get pretty much all foam. Any suggestions?

Rob

That's not unusual for a fully carb'd beer.

Just do your best and then proceed with capping on the foam that you got whilst topping off the bottles. Foam is foam...:D
 
That's not unusual for a fully carb'd beer.

Just do your best and then proceed with capping on the foam that you got whilst topping off the bottles. Foam is foam...:D

We will do. Thanks for the quick response. I love using this thing. As soon as I saw the video I ordered a couple of number 2 stoppers and started bottling as soon as they came in.

I cut the beer out tube off (about 1/2 inch) to help keep sediment out of my beer glass at all times. This just takes it to the next clear level!

Rob
 
BM, I love you!!!!! Bobby too. I have an old Foxx CP filler that I hate using. I am now FREE, FREE, FREE to make good on all the homebrew that I have promised and not fulfilled on due to kegging instead of bottling, and my wretched hatred of that thing. Tralalalalalala....happy, happy. XXXOOO
 
Just finished bottling 5gal of stout and 5 of ESB and this worked great,

I think I might be doing something wrong, it took a long time. But they are holding carbonation great.
 
worked like a charm! just bottled up eight bombers. best five bucks i've spent on gear in a long time. ten foot hose, i had no foaming over. i'm sure we'll drink them all today, so we won't get to see how long they hold the carbination.
 
Just finished bottling 5gal of stout and 5 of ESB and this worked great,

I think I might be doing something wrong, it took a long time. But they are holding carbonation great.

It takes a bit of time. All that fine motor movement makes my hands hurt after only 10 or so bottles. I would not have done a whole batch this way unless i had a REALLY good reason.

It is great for back sweetened ciders and if you want to empty a keg.
 
I've been using this to take beers with me wherever I go instead of buying. I like it cause you can drink homebrew straight from the bottle. Sometimes I feel like a snob/jerk walking into my friends house and asking for a glass while they're all drinking from their Busch Cans.
Cost a whopping 39Cents. Had the racking cane left over from starter kit and who doesn't have hose laying around if you're already to the point of kegging! Also started off using a picnick tap on kegs before I got the tap hooked up.
I've had some problems but just re-read original post and realized why. I wasn't filling until beer came out, just till it was full. No problems that led to bad taste and I always drank what I botteled that night. I always seem to do it as we're walking out the door to the get-together and don't wanna make a mess on the basement floor.
 
I used mine for the first time yesterday and it rocked. I bottled a 12 pack of my porter from the keg and had no problems. I found that if I let the beer that was left in the racking cane drip into the top of the bottle it produced just enough foam to completely fill the bottle. Will use again!
 
I just tested this for our oatmeal stout this weekend. We got the amount of headspace perfect for competition. And when we opened a bottle to test later that night and the next day, it was still carbed exactly the same as the beer in the keg. Amazing! It seemed complicated when I read over all the posts, but when we actually tried it, it was so simple! We only chilled the bottles for about five minutes after sanitizing, and had almost zero foam. Thanks for making my Saturday!
 
...We only chilled the bottles for about five minutes after sanitizing, and had almost zero foam. Thanks for making my Saturday!

I've stopped chilling the bottles all together. Now I do what the local micro does and that's one last minute rinse in sanitizer and then a rinse with cold tap water.

Apparently, the moisture inside the bottles from the tap water suppresses foaming. I've been doing this now for about 6+ months. Sure is a time saver.
 
I've stopped chilling the bottles all together. Now I do what the local micro does and that's one last minute rinse in sanitizer and then a rinse with cold tap water.

Apparently, the moisture inside the bottles from the tap water suppresses foaming. I've been doing this now for about 6+ months. Sure is a time saver.

So do you use cold tap water rinse first then sanitizer?
 
I use a mild bleach water for sanitizing so the rinse comes second.

But as you've noted in other threads, your water seems to be quite "clean" of any buggies.

I dunno if I'd trust my house's water supply for post-sanitizer rinsing. 90 years old house, iron pipes, etc etc.
 
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