So it seems to be fine to open your fermenter and check gravity readings, grab a sample, whatever, right up until fermentation has finished.
Then, let's say, you transfer to a pressure barrel.
The internet is of the opinion that the moment a bit of air gets into that barrel, your beer is dead, within a couple of days.
So, at what point does the beer become so vulnerable to contact with air? Clearly nothing has changed when you first transfer it. After a couple of weeks, once it's fully primed, is it susceptible to staling then? If so, what has changed during conditioning to make the presence of air so bad, when it didn't do any harm before?
I've got my first pressure barrel batch priming at the moment. I haven't got any way of adding C02 yet, but I've caved into temptation and tried a few pints before it's fully primed. There's been a bit of glugging, so a bit of air has got in.
Is the whole beer-going-stale thing a myth? Or should I panic and drink this whole barrel full of beer as fast as I can?
Cheers for any thoughts
Then, let's say, you transfer to a pressure barrel.
The internet is of the opinion that the moment a bit of air gets into that barrel, your beer is dead, within a couple of days.
So, at what point does the beer become so vulnerable to contact with air? Clearly nothing has changed when you first transfer it. After a couple of weeks, once it's fully primed, is it susceptible to staling then? If so, what has changed during conditioning to make the presence of air so bad, when it didn't do any harm before?
I've got my first pressure barrel batch priming at the moment. I haven't got any way of adding C02 yet, but I've caved into temptation and tried a few pints before it's fully primed. There's been a bit of glugging, so a bit of air has got in.
Is the whole beer-going-stale thing a myth? Or should I panic and drink this whole barrel full of beer as fast as I can?
Cheers for any thoughts