Slappy White
Well-Known Member
cheap and easy, just how i like it....thanks BM
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.
Most likely due to the significantly higher ratio of gas to liquid in the keg....Wondering if the smaller amount of beverage in the keg may have caused the foaming for some reason.
. It's also easier if you just blast the keg with enough of a burst of that 5psi gas to barely push out the beer.
I did freeze mine but I also had the pressure really low and didn't really need the counter-pressure (i.e. stopper) either. The last couple I just filled up without the stopper. And that was with only ~2' of 1/4" beer line with a bottling wand (not a full cane) stuck right into the picnic tap.I didn't freeze the bottles, just sanitized them with the vinator before use, I did 10 bottle batches. This time I turned the pressure down to 2-5 PSI through a 10 ft line.
I actually didn't even need the counter pressure, there was hardly any foam throughout the whole filling process.
Yambor,
The stopper is your 'counter-pressure'. When you stick the cane with stopper into the bottle and seat the stopper only a little beer will flow and then the pressure in the bottle will build up to equal the pressure in the keg (at which point flow stops). In order to get the beer flowing again you have to 'burp' the bottle by ever so gently pinching the stopper or cocking the stopper to one side...whatever it takes to let a little pressure out without letting it ALL out at once. Then it's just an ON/OFF process...FLOW/BURP/FLOW/BURP/etc. until the bottle is full...then you'll have to flow a little more as you pull the cane out (because the cane displaces some beer in the bottle).
The idea is to get the carbonated beer into the bottle without gushing or excessive foaming. Then just tip the bottle to get it to foam a little bit (enough to just barely overflow) and quickly cap on that foam.
One burning question I have, is how do I deal with beerlines if they're already hooked up in my kegerator? i want to pull the line off and hook up a BMBF, but I'm worried about leaking beer all over the inside from the unhooked line. Will the tap hold the beer in the line, like when you put your thumb over the end of a straw full of water?
...I wouldn't dilly dally - you don't want the actual beer temperature to warm up or you will lose more CO2.
You'll have to help me out. I'm already half-past-druck this evening. What's your question exactly? And use big crayons so I can follow along please.From one Lamp lover to another...
I'm doing a Belgian parti gyle brew next month (tripel, belgian pale) and I'd like to bottle half of each batch and keg the other half.
I was wondering if you've ever done any higher gravity brews or bottle condition brews this way?
I saw you pic in the post on Corona bottles with yeast sediment and it got me thinking why do I need to add bottle sugar when I already keg.