I've been thinking this one over for a while now...
You always hear that if you hand pump a keg, the beer is quickly oxidized and will go stale fast, but there are a few things that just don't make sense to me.
1.) Is there not still a layer of co2 on the beer from the factory (to keep it from oxidizing before it's sold? If so, wouldn't that protect the beer when air is pumped into the keg?
2.) If you keg, but are forced to use a hand pump...
Oxidation of our wort is not a concern because the amount of oxygen that can dissolve in beer is relatively low compared to the amount of co2 that will carry that o2 out during fermentation. If that's the case, why not force the (hand pumped tap and now oxidized) beer to become flat, carrying the dissolved o2 out of the beer (like fermentation does), then re carb?
You always hear that if you hand pump a keg, the beer is quickly oxidized and will go stale fast, but there are a few things that just don't make sense to me.
1.) Is there not still a layer of co2 on the beer from the factory (to keep it from oxidizing before it's sold? If so, wouldn't that protect the beer when air is pumped into the keg?
2.) If you keg, but are forced to use a hand pump...
Oxidation of our wort is not a concern because the amount of oxygen that can dissolve in beer is relatively low compared to the amount of co2 that will carry that o2 out during fermentation. If that's the case, why not force the (hand pumped tap and now oxidized) beer to become flat, carrying the dissolved o2 out of the beer (like fermentation does), then re carb?