The dishwasher is great. I don't use any soap at all, just run the thing on a normal cycle after having rinsed the bottles out right after drinking.
It gets so hot that they are pretty well sanitized and I then dunk them in Starsan just before bottling and put the bottles back on the dishwasher rack to drain prior to bottling.
Another shortcut I use is to do almost all 22 ounce bottles, with a half dozen or so 12's. This cuts the # of bottles in half and a 22 ouncer is about my standard dose.
I don't do my glasses in the dishwasher, cos it leaves an odour in the glasses, surely this would also apply to the bottles ?
pshhhh! blow my own bottles every time I bottle. same with my carboys. can't get more sanitized than hot glowing glass.I put the DW on rinse, NO soap and start er up. Cleans and sanitizes just fine.
pshhhh! blow my own bottles every time I bottle. same with my carboys. can't get more sanitized than hot glowing glass.
pshhhh! blow my own bottles every time I bottle. same with my carboys. can't get more sanitized than hot glowing glass.
that kinda weirded me out a little...AND just throw them away when you're done, and re-blow for the next batch. Plastic buckets and kegs are for wussies! Real men blow!
I ain't got those. in fact, I breath out pure yeast nutrient.Enjoy your breath germs![]()
I got enough for 3 more batches...Just remember it is getting tough supplying you with sand with all this frozen ground.
I'm the sort of nerd who gets pleasure from amassing a huge stockpile of bottles, and then filling them with way more beer than I can drink. Having an unreasonable amount of bottles full of various different beers just makes me feel better.
I bottle since I started brewing 2 years ago.Bought a kegging system a month ago can't wait to build my kegerator. Can't wait to see my wife face when she see the kegerator in the workshop hahaha! I do 23 liters batch so i'll bottle 4L and keg the left-over. I gave a dark ale to my friend last year and we drank it yesterday, it was delicious. I don't think I'm able to age a beer that long in a keg. I'll continue to bottle beer because it's a great gift for friends and family and so easy with my hundreds of grolsh bottle. It's so rewarding when you look at all those bottles filled with delicious beer![]()
That's great and they look awesome but I highly suggest you actually read this thread... you can bottle from your keg and as yooper pointed out a properly sealed keg is better then a bottle for ageing as its light impervious. Bottles still let light in.
Do you keep your beer in the garden? I've yet to skunk a beer and I bottle everything. I even keep meads in 12 oz crown bottles for over a year with no issues.
Really not wanting to get into an argument (I've never kegged, so I don't know). I'm really looking for the correct answer because I'm setting up my kegerator right now, but I was still planning on bottling some batches. Is it really faster to bottle from a keg?
It seems like a very similar process. You still have to clean and sanitize all the bottles (biggest pain in the butt to me). You still have to transfer over to some vessel. You still have to fill the bottles, which from what I've been seeing, it more annoying from a keg due to foaming issues which you don't have when bottling with priming sugar. So is it really faster to fill bottles from the keg?
Of course there is also the question of which is better, but I've seen people on both sides say their method is better, so I'm just going to assume it's either equivalent or possibly recipe dependent and we don't have a definitive answer on this.
Really not wanting to get into an argument (I've never kegged, so I don't know). I'm really looking for the correct answer because I'm setting up my kegerator right now, but I was still planning on bottling some batches. Is it really faster to bottle from a keg?
It seems like a very similar process. You still have to clean and sanitize all the bottles (biggest pain in the butt to me). You still have to transfer over to some vessel. You still have to fill the bottles, which from what I've been seeing, it more annoying from a keg due to foaming issues which you don't have when bottling with priming sugar. So is it really faster to fill bottles from the keg?
Of course there is also the question of which is better, but I've seen people on both sides say their method is better, so I'm just going to assume it's either equivalent or possibly recipe dependent and we don't have a definitive answer on this.
When I have extra time and a quality beer: I like to bottle
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Thanks for the info. Makes sense.It actually may take a wee bit longer in terms of the actual process of bottling from a keg as you have to clean and sanitize the keg and beer gun in addition to the bottles you already would have to clean and sanitize if bottle conditioning. Maybe an extra 15 minutes maximum. If your not bottling a batch you probably save almost an hour as your only cleaning one giant bottle and filling one giant bottle. Where it CAN also be faster is the amount of time it takes for your beer to be carbonated. In the long run kegging will save you time. Maybe not for every batch if you decide to bottle but unless a beer is really special I almost never bottle. If I just wanna bring a growler I skip the beer gun and fill it up from the tap.
You can in a pinch do the chill ,force carb ,and shake method and have carbonated beer in 48 hours. You can't do that when bottle conditioning. What happens if you under carb in bottles? Over carb? In kegging it's as simple as adding co2 if low or pulling the pressure relief valve if to high. Not as easy to adjust when bottling.
Are there any veteran home brewers out there who prefer to bottle as opposed to kegging? Forget money differences, or time till you can drink differences. Are there any all grain brewers who just *prefer* to bottle??
Bottling from a bottling bucket is for the birds.
I keg 90% of my brews, but still prime and bottle (from a keg) every once in a while.
Do you mean you mix up the priming sugar in the keg, then fill bottles and bottle condition them? Or do you mean you keg-condition, then bottle?