This is definitely the best video I've found on force carbing your beer. Other videos I watched either tell you to wait a few days before drinking (so what's the point of force carbing again?) or tell you to carry out some much more laborious process. Nice job bearded beer dudes.
Floating dip tube and just ferment your wort in the keg. Once fermentation is done cold crash and then burst carb to close to 30. Works great for me. Good video gentlemen.
I like to change out the gray gas connection to the black beverage connector and connect to the c02 tank. Leave the keg up right and just tip the keg back and fourth no need to lay keg on its side since the out tube goes to the bottom. You can hear the C02 bubbling.
Ok I just tried this and I got some excellent results man thanks for me not having to wait 4 days to carbonate a kegger and saving my weekend during the covids!!!! Peace.
This worked! Completely saved my father in law and I from contacting my wife / his daughter and asking her to bring a carton home for us. We coined your procedure Beer CPR, it works, it's amazing and bottoms up to you fine blokes!
I make a German Apfelwein (think of drinking a Granny Smith apple lol) because it's my wife's favorite. But she really loves it sparkling. I usually have one in the fridge, so I put it into a sanitized 1L bottle, squeeze all the air out and use a carb-a-cap. Shake-a shake-a shake for 5 or 10 minutes at about 30 psi, and bam! happy wife. 😊
@@HOMEBREW4LIFE 2 years later and I wanted to give you another shout out for this video! It works perfectly every single time. I'm a pro at it now. LOL
There are lots if ways to keg your beer and these guys do a good job of telling you how to do it fast. Fast is fine if that’s how you you want to do it because of being time poor and party ready. This method will get the bubbles into your beer, no doubt. But, with some shortcuts there are some sacrifices. Stripping out aroma and over shooting your optimal CO2 serving volumes are some of them. Getting your pressure, temp and time balanced will produce a better overall beer without compromise, but let’s face it, some beer is just BFD...’beer for drinking.’ Sometimes, for the greater good, you have to make a few sacrifices and shake that keg. Stop drop and roll! Thanks for putting the video out there. Cheers
The video was great...thank you! My question is for soda, not beer. How do I flavor the force carbonated keg? I've tried Torani & Monin syrups...but it just doesn't taste right. Is there a "special carbonation flavoring"?? Thanks in advance!
Hey, I commented before about my first beer and I am unsure how to tag you in a reply from a like. So, sorry about the double-post. I did everything to the letter but it seemed like my beer was over-carbonated. I am not saying it was this video's instructions that caused it, especially with so many positive comments about doing it. However... I had to connect my gas line to my beer line and put it on ~4psi to bubble through the beer and bleed it out via the PRV in order to get it low enough to pour. PSI post bleeding is 10psi. But it was just foam and flat before that. Now it is pouring with a nice head, but it is still flat. Any ideas, it was a blue moon clone (wheat beer)if that helps. No idea what I have done wrong or how to get it to pour correctly. The beer line is the right length for the diameter.
Gonna try this out next week. Made a hazy for the 4th and I'm running a bit behind on time so I need to force carb it. Hoping it turns out good. Appreciate the videos
I have a nitro set up and want to know if you can give tips on how to "speed carbonate" a nitro brew. I love the simplicity of "shake 200 times" and wait half an hour. Easy to do and I had no problem with over carbonating. Thank you for this video!
After doing some more reading, I modified your method to speed carbonate the Chocolate Milk Stout that I had already kegged and chilled down. I use a 75/25 Nitro/CO2 blend. For a nitro stout, you want a lower carbonation amount. I've ready anywhere from 1.3 to 1.9 vols. My thinking was that I wanted about half of the carbonation that I normally like so I did the following. I hooked up my CO2 tank to the keg and laid it on its side so the gas is rising through the beer. Set to 20 PSI. Roll back and forth 100 times like you demonstrate in your video. Unhook the tank and let it rest upright in the fridge for 30 minutes. Purge the existing pressure and hook up your 75/25 to allow for the correct vols you want based on standard tables. For my temp, I have it set to a dispensing pressure of 20psi. Beautiful cascade, creamy head, and overall an extremely satisfying Nitro pour experience. Prost!
10 psi and the faucet connected directly on the beer post? How is the beer not rushing out? I can't se any flow restriction on the faucet... Anyway, great video!
Awesome Video! I just picked a little 2.5 gallon torpedo keg for taking on the go. I love beer, but am specialized in wine. Going to start force carbonating some of the rose wines and fruity concord wines.
Just for fun I did some searching and there were so many posts covering these lengthy processes for force-carbing followed buy letting the keg sit for 4-7 more days. Instead I just followed this and was drinking it 30 mins later!
At minute 5:05, there is a link for another one of your videos at the bottom left of the screen. Can you move it so I can see what your writing. Maybe move the link to the top right of the screen so it doesn't interfere with writing. Thank you.
Help me. I disconnected the co2 and it's been a week or more and me beer still has a 2inch head of foam! Its cold in the kegrator so shouldn't be fermentation me thinks. Also seems would go down after pourin 10 pints
Excellent vid. You guys really know how to cut to the chase. Big fan. A lot of the other channels just rave on with bullshit. You guys are less bullshit means drinking more beer. And at the end of the day that what its all about.
Hey Guys, great info and as a new home brewer your channel is good humoured and knowledgable. One thing i don't understand with the sanitiser purging is how do you get the last of it out with this method? Even if the dip tube isn't cut short there will be some left in the bottom?
I don’t understand why you pushed the sanitizer out with CO2 when you upended it back up to rack your beer in. Does the fact that CO2 is more dense than outside air keep the CO2 in the keg while racking in the beer?
I only have a 2.5 lb Co2 tank. I have 5gallon batches, with purging air, force carbing and service pressure am I going to run out? am I overthinking this!?!?! Great vid btw.
Incredibly helpful video! This is how we carbonate all our beers. However, we recently did a Scottish ale that doesn’t seem to stay carbonated. We’ve force carbonated it twice, purged it, and then tasted it but it holds almost no carbonation. Any tips?
I've taken 1 brewing class in my life & Maury was my instructor extraordinaire! to this day I still brew with techniques & nuances implemented by Maury. BAM!
I tried this a few weeks ago with my first three kegs of beer. I then took them to Burning Man. It worked great. Too good, really. I got to drink 4 or 5 pints... out of 15 gallons. I guess I gotta do it again.
I used to do this. I dont recomend this method. Different brews take different co² levels. If you shake to much or to violent you over carbonate. It's a real mess when you bleed off the shaken beer to. You have just spend 2-3 weeks on your home brew, wait one more damm day for perfect repeatable results. 40psi for 24 hours on light beers @ 32°and 40psi for 26-28 hours on darker beers @32°... 50psi for 3 days for sodas(rootbeer, cream soda) @ 34°
Getting ready to make the leap to force carbonation instead of bottling which is very annoying and time consuming. Fun vid guys! Seems like you keep your brew days fun. When this Coronavirus shit is over I'm going to gather some friends to make beer together.
I did this and it worked perfectly. However, I put it in the keg the night before and then in the refrigerator. Set at 24 psi and then followed this video for force carbonation.
I have seen smaller kegs (1.75gal - 3gal) but they are 2-3 times more $$$ then the 5gal. Can you fill only 1-2 gallons and force carb? Or do you have to use 5gal.
Nice video! I had one problem following your steps: When shaking Keg connected at 25-30 PSI, beer from Keg start to escape from Keg through the co2 hose to the co2 tank and I had to stop. Any clues what's happening or what I'm doing wrong?
Hombres. Just started kegging (like literally the fedex truck dropped off my kit) and this video was on point. Took the guess work out and I’m now kick’n back with a perfectly carbonated 2ipa. Cheers dudes. Bottles are for babies
Does the rocking the keg part just get it carbed more quickly? Presume if you just carb it overnight it will work in exactly same way? Thanks enjoying vids
I guess the one question I have is whether you cold crash the beer in the fermenter bucket first or transfer it into the keg after sanitizing it, seat the lid, cold crash and then carbonate in it?
@@HOMEBREW4LIFE Thanks for The quick reply! I'm a trucker on the east coast side that drives a lot at night, listen to the videos and am really delving into homebrew. I love your channel, the humor and all the ideas!
If you are continually brewing, and finish a batch before your previous one is done, or want to brew bigger batches and fill up multiple kegs, how do you store the freshly filled kegs? At 30 psi, 15 psi?
different beer styles are carbed differently. most touts and porters are lower so maybe only do a 100 rocks. See how it is and you can always do more if you feel like it needs it. Belgians and hefs may have a higher carb so start with 200 rocks and you can always add more if need be. As far as crashing temp, the lower the better to help clean up the beer. I crash at 33F and serve at 38F
great video. I don’t have a fridge large enough to hold my carboy. Any issue with transferring the beer into the keg And burping off some O2 the night before, cold crashing it in the kegerator over night, and then force carbonating the next day?
I haven’t kegged yet but will have beer ready to keg the day before the super bowl. Would you recommend against doing it this way for the first time kegging? Or is it just as easy?
HOMEBREW 4 LIFE then you disconnect the gas line,right? I got feedbacks about direct mounted taps,they have no resistance so the beer comes out foamy. Can you explain it more? I will switch to kegging but can’t decide if I should buy these or picnic taps at the first trial
Great video. I'm just wondering about one thing, when you were pumping CO2 in to the beer before you force carbonated, what was the psi set at and how long were you pumping C02 in to your keg before you began to force carbonate? Thank you!
10ish, it doesn't take much. You're just trying to force the oxygen out. Pump a bit in, the CO2 will sit on the bottom, purge the O2 out the top a couple of times.
Great vid. I had this idea in my head. Question: when you fill the keg with sanitizer, do you fill the entire keg? I was thinking about 2 gallons of Star San mix and them topping it off with water.
Dumb question but should I leave the CO2 on at 8-12 psi or just turn it on when I’m planning to have a beer? My last keg i did the 12psi set and forget method leaving the CO2 on at 12psi and it overcarbed the keg. Fixed the problem by degassing and only setting to 12psi open the CO2 pour the beer and the close the CO2 valve.
What happens if you forget the cold crash step? I gave the corny keg 25-30 psi for 200 seconds when it was room temp and put it in the fridge. Is it going to be overcarbed?
Quick question after your done rocking the keg and let in sit for for 30mins do you purge the keg down to zero psi and then put the gas on to serving pressure or do you just purge down to 8psi attach gas at 8psi and serve.
This video helped me a huge bit with my first ever keg of beer this week. I have bubbles in the beer line, any suggestions on what may have caused it and how I can rid the line of bubbles?
They were force carbing at 25-30 PSI. You'll want to reduce that pressure when you serve, down from 5 to 12 PSI. Also a lot depends on the style of beer and of the temperature of your beer and the line. Also the length and diameter of your beer line can affect the amount of foaming. You can find a lot more info with a Google search, but it can be fun just to tinker with it until you've got it dialed.
Finally! Home brewers that speak my language. Basic, to the point and no time wasting bullshit! Love it!!
Thanks for watching Simmo!
I usually watch this two or tree times before I keg and carb. Kind of forgetful here! thanks for the tutorial... M
Thx for watching, cheers MC!
I thought I was the only one
We're all in this forgetful life together... Nothing to do with my beer intake gents
This is definitely the best video I've found on force carbing your beer. Other videos I watched either tell you to wait a few days before drinking (so what's the point of force carbing again?) or tell you to carry out some much more laborious process. Nice job bearded beer dudes.
Thanks Ian. Cheers!
Floating dip tube and just ferment your wort in the keg. Once fermentation is done cold crash and then burst carb to close to 30. Works great for me. Good video gentlemen.
I like to change out the gray gas connection to the black beverage connector and connect to the c02 tank.
Leave the keg up right and just tip the keg back and fourth no need to lay keg on its side since the out tube goes to the bottom. You can hear the C02 bubbling.
Maury has a knack for explaining things, I took one of is brew classes and he explains things easily.
Love this video. You saved me watching other videos 10x as long
Glad it helped!
The best and most sensible video here
Ok I just tried this and I got some excellent results man thanks for me not having to wait 4 days to carbonate a kegger and saving my weekend during the covids!!!! Peace.
Hell yeah bro!
As many have said, excellent video! thanks for posting!
This worked! Completely saved my father in law and I from contacting my wife / his daughter and asking her to bring a carton home for us. We coined your procedure Beer CPR, it works, it's amazing and bottoms up to you fine blokes!
Hey now! Cheers for watching Robert!
Props to Maurey who keeps his composure while CH messes with him!
🏆
Can you guys make a video on keg fermenting? Love your guys vids!! Thanks for inspiring us all!
I had to watch this since youtube keeps throwing the video to the top of my recommendations.. classic!
much love braj!
Thanks for making this How-To video. I've gotten much better results carbonating my kegs this way. Cheers!
Thanks for the comment Heath. Cheers!
This link below is for to buy a plastic Cornelius keg for 5L great to always have in the fridge!
Cheers Adrian!
I just forced carb my kolsch and I’m waiting for the 30 mins to be done rn, I’m excited to try it. Thanks guys!!!!!!!!!!
Cheers bro. Keep us posted!
I didn’t know Neil Fallon from Clutch brewed beer. Cool
I make a German Apfelwein (think of drinking a Granny Smith apple lol) because it's my wife's favorite. But she really loves it sparkling. I usually have one in the fridge, so I put it into a sanitized 1L bottle, squeeze all the air out and use a carb-a-cap. Shake-a shake-a shake for 5 or 10 minutes at about 30 psi, and bam! happy wife. 😊
Just tried this to a beer that I over carbonated and then degassed rescued and regassed! Worked a treat! Cheers
Cheers paul!
CHECKOUT OUR PODCAST! th-cam.com/channels/PnbjrHhr3618ywTtRrzmWw.html
I'm new to home brewing and this is my next venture. Great video!
William Rodrigues cheers will!
@@HOMEBREW4LIFE 2 years later and I wanted to give you another shout out for this video! It works perfectly every single time. I'm a pro at it now. LOL
First time on the channel. You had me at "Taking a dump" haha
much love richie, cheers!
you guys are awesome I've watched a few force carb videos and yours is the best!
Cheers Kyle!
There are lots if ways to keg your beer and these guys do a good job of telling you how to do it fast.
Fast is fine if that’s how you you want to do it because of being time poor and party ready.
This method will get the bubbles into your beer, no doubt. But, with some shortcuts there are some sacrifices. Stripping out aroma and over shooting your optimal CO2 serving volumes are some of them. Getting your pressure, temp and time balanced will produce a better overall beer without compromise, but let’s face it, some beer is just BFD...’beer for drinking.’ Sometimes, for the greater good, you have to make a few sacrifices and shake that keg. Stop drop and roll!
Thanks for putting the video out there.
Cheers
The video was great...thank you! My question is for soda, not beer. How do I flavor the force carbonated keg? I've tried Torani & Monin syrups...but it just doesn't taste right. Is there a "special carbonation flavoring"?? Thanks in advance!
Hey, I commented before about my first beer and I am unsure how to tag you in a reply from a like. So, sorry about the double-post.
I did everything to the letter but it seemed like my beer was over-carbonated. I am not saying it was this video's instructions that caused it, especially with so many positive comments about doing it.
However...
I had to connect my gas line to my beer line and put it on ~4psi to bubble through the beer and bleed it out via the PRV in order to get it low enough to pour.
PSI post bleeding is 10psi. But it was just foam and flat before that.
Now it is pouring with a nice head, but it is still flat.
Any ideas, it was a blue moon clone (wheat beer)if that helps.
No idea what I have done wrong or how to get it to pour correctly. The beer line is the right length for the diameter.
Iv done this twice now, exactly I believe. Half hour at 33 degrees after shaking, purge, and cold the night before. Still nothing but foam after.
awesome keep me posted braj!
Good video, y'all!
Gonna try this out next week. Made a hazy for the 4th and I'm running a bit behind on time so I need to force carb it. Hoping it turns out good. Appreciate the videos
Cheers braj!
I have a nitro set up and want to know if you can give tips on how to "speed carbonate" a nitro brew. I love the simplicity of "shake 200 times" and wait half an hour. Easy to do and I had no problem with over carbonating. Thank you for this video!
We do nitro at the brewery but not at home, but you just gave me a great idea for a future video. Thanks for watching chad brewer
After doing some more reading, I modified your method to speed carbonate the Chocolate Milk Stout that I had already kegged and chilled down. I use a 75/25 Nitro/CO2 blend. For a nitro stout, you want a lower carbonation amount. I've ready anywhere from 1.3 to 1.9 vols. My thinking was that I wanted about half of the carbonation that I normally like so I did the following. I hooked up my CO2 tank to the keg and laid it on its side so the gas is rising through the beer. Set to 20 PSI. Roll back and forth 100 times like you demonstrate in your video. Unhook the tank and let it rest upright in the fridge for 30 minutes. Purge the existing pressure and hook up your 75/25 to allow for the correct vols you want based on standard tables. For my temp, I have it set to a dispensing pressure of 20psi. Beautiful cascade, creamy head, and overall an extremely satisfying Nitro pour experience. Prost!
10 psi and the faucet connected directly on the beer post? How is the beer not rushing out? I can't se any flow restriction on the faucet... Anyway, great video!
Great stuff guys! Doing this tonight on my Ale!
Hell yeah cheers travis!
@@HOMEBREW4LIFE I know this video is a bit old. Any new tips or should I just send it like this?
Nope. Stick with it!
Hell yeah thanks! Just getting back into brewing after about 5 years! Glad I found you guys the content is awesome!
Awesome Video! I just picked a little 2.5 gallon torpedo keg for taking on the go. I love beer, but am specialized in wine. Going to start force carbonating some of the rose wines and fruity concord wines.
Cheers guys! Keep us posted!
2 Bar + 200 seconds = 🍺👌
you got this!
Omw to refill the co2 tank right now, gotta watch this every time lol
Im always doing this, nothing worse than mates coming over in 30 mins and you haven't carbed your beer yet. this is a life saver!! Cheers,
Glad it helped
Great video. I usually just wait the two weeks but moved a DIPA over last night and needed it for the GOT season finale tonight. Pours like a beauty.
Heck Yes Paul. That's awesome to hear! Cheers my dude! ~CH
Just for fun I did some searching and there were so many posts covering these lengthy processes for force-carbing followed buy letting the keg sit for 4-7 more days. Instead I just followed this and was drinking it 30 mins later!
Heck yeah cheers mike!
Can anyone help me on how to make that faucet piece? Cool video by the way I’m going to be trying this out this week
Worked perfectly for me with a session ipa...thanks!
Awesome Jason cheers to the weekend!
Donny is such a dreamboat
#truth
At minute 5:05, there is a link for another one of your videos at the bottom left of the screen. Can you move it so I can see what your writing. Maybe move the link to the top right of the screen so it doesn't interfere with writing. Thank you.
Prost good vid we are home brewers and just found your channel and subscribed
Cheers!
used your method - worked GREAT
Right on tyrone. Enjoy ur beer!
500 gallons of beer. Someone got a bit excited there. Cracking content, good job guys
Thanks for watching Billy!
@@HOMEBREW4LIFE no worries man, im sitting drinking a flat homebrew taking notes from you guys :)
Great video! My brother and I can now enjoy our Thanksgiving Batch on Christmas Eve now. Cheers brothers-in-brew 🍻
Hell yeah! Cheers joe!
I'm going to quick carb a tart cherry hydromel right after watching this video. I'll let you know how it goes on tomorrow's Hoppy Hour.
Hell yeah braj!
When Shacking the tank did you keep the 30 psi on continuously? Or you turn of the co2 inlet and then shake it?
Help me. I disconnected the co2 and it's been a week or more and me beer still has a 2inch head of foam! Its cold in the kegrator so shouldn't be fermentation me thinks. Also seems would go down after pourin 10 pints
Well done guys! Cheers!
Cheers brotha!
Just force carbed my first beer that I put down (AG blue moon clone)... Why does 30 minutes seem longer when you are waiting?
Excellent vid. You guys really know how to cut to the chase. Big fan. A lot of the other channels just rave on with bullshit.
You guys are less bullshit means drinking more beer.
And at the end of the day that what its all about.
Thanks for the kind words. Cheers beggar101
Hey guys. What if I want to carbonate 2.6 gallons instead of 5 gallons? Would itbtake half the time?
Hey Guys, great info and as a new home brewer your channel is good humoured and knowledgable. One thing i don't understand with the sanitiser purging is how do you get the last of it out with this method? Even if the dip tube isn't cut short there will be some left in the bottom?
Cheers Graeme!
It won’t harm the beer or you if there’s leftover. It’s completely food safe (assuming you follow the mixing directions of the starsan)
I don’t understand why you pushed the sanitizer out with CO2 when you upended it back up to rack your beer in. Does the fact that CO2 is more dense than outside air keep the CO2 in the keg while racking in the beer?
I only have a 2.5 lb Co2 tank. I have 5gallon batches, with purging air, force carbing and service pressure am I going to run out? am I overthinking this!?!?! Great vid btw.
you all are really temping me to buy a keg
bottling is a nightmare, the worst part of homebrewing by far. Great youtube btw!
@@HOMEBREW4LIFE thanks homie
Incredibly helpful video! This is how we carbonate all our beers. However, we recently did a Scottish ale that doesn’t seem to stay carbonated. We’ve force carbonated it twice, purged it, and then tasted it but it holds almost no carbonation. Any tips?
Wow that's fast. Going to do that when I get home from work tonight
Cheers bro! Let us know how it goes!
@@HOMEBREW4LIFE it went great! Drinking a pint now and it's great!
Hell yeah!
I've taken 1 brewing class in my life & Maury was my instructor extraordinaire! to this day I still brew with techniques & nuances implemented by Maury. BAM!
Amando Cardenas awesome!
I tried this a few weeks ago with my first three kegs of beer. I then took them to Burning Man. It worked great. Too good, really. I got to drink 4 or 5 pints... out of 15 gallons. I guess I gotta do it again.
yuuuuus! Awesome mr spotfire! Do you have instagram?
Ya... just followed you there... and here.
I used to do this. I dont recomend this method. Different brews take different co² levels. If you shake to much or to violent you over carbonate. It's a real mess when you bleed off the shaken beer to. You have just spend 2-3 weeks on your home brew, wait one more damm day for perfect repeatable results. 40psi for 24 hours on light beers @ 32°and 40psi for 26-28 hours on darker beers @32°... 50psi for 3 days for sodas(rootbeer, cream soda) @ 34°
Getting ready to make the leap to force carbonation instead of bottling which is very annoying and time consuming. Fun vid guys! Seems like you keep your brew days fun. When this Coronavirus shit is over I'm going to gather some friends to make beer together.
Anthony Frank hell yeah tony
I did this and it worked perfectly. However, I put it in the keg the night before and then in the refrigerator. Set at 24 psi and then followed this video for force carbonation.
my man!
I have seen smaller kegs (1.75gal - 3gal) but they are 2-3 times more $$$ then the 5gal. Can you fill only 1-2 gallons and force carb? Or do you have to use 5gal.
Nice video! I had one problem following your steps: When shaking Keg connected at 25-30 PSI, beer from Keg start to escape from Keg through the co2 hose to the co2 tank and I had to stop. Any clues what's happening or what I'm doing wrong?
For sanatizer to go out and after puting beer ti the keg. What psi should I use?
Hombres. Just started kegging (like literally the fedex truck dropped off my kit) and this video was on point. Took the guess work out and I’m now kick’n back with a perfectly carbonated 2ipa. Cheers dudes. Bottles are for babies
Glad to hear it!
That was sweet. Just lost 3 days trying to carbonate last corney!
Video for closed corny fill from car boy?
Coming soon!
I was also wondering if there is a way to bottle from the keg if I want to send some beers along with a friend.
Yup just do it. No need to overthink it
So is cutting down the time relative to the number of gallons? So 2 1/2 gallons is 100 seconds etc.?
Does the rocking the keg part just get it carbed more quickly? Presume if you just carb it overnight it will work in exactly same way? Thanks enjoying vids
How many beers do you think I would be able to dispense with a 5lb cylinder. I am getting about two per cylinder and I feel like that is low.
Hundreds
Awesome video guys!!!
Cheers Bro!
I am going to try it this weekend and film my results. thanks for the inspiration.
Awesome man. Man i love the beer community
Fantastic. I needed this video.
Good times yesterday!
Definitely! Looking forward to bringing the stout over for a tasting :P
S/o hydrobrew, good video as usual too
Much love tee, thx! 🍻
I guess the one question I have is whether you cold crash the beer in the fermenter bucket first or transfer it into the keg after sanitizing it, seat the lid, cold crash and then carbonate in it?
It doesn’t really matter to cold crash a fermenter. It will cold crash in the keg the first night
@@HOMEBREW4LIFE Thanks for The quick reply! I'm a trucker on the east coast side that drives a lot at night, listen to the videos and am really delving into homebrew. I love your channel, the humor and all the ideas!
If you are continually brewing, and finish a batch before your previous one is done, or want to brew bigger batches and fill up multiple kegs, how do you store the freshly filled kegs? At 30 psi, 15 psi?
Great Video fellas, gona give this a go at the weekend, Save me 5 Days lol
Thanks for watching Chris! Also do you have IG?
Need to get into your back catalogue 👍 IG as in Instagram?
Yeah we're trying to follow fellow homebrewers on there
i do but its for work, need to make an iWannaBrew one, ill follow you guys if i find yas 👍
Does wearing a green beanie help the process ? I've only got a blue one...
Haha cheers!
Great video guys. Do you vary the number of rock depending on beer style? And what is the desired temperature after cold crash?
different beer styles are carbed differently. most touts and porters are lower so maybe only do a 100 rocks. See how it is and you can always do more if you feel like it needs it. Belgians and hefs may have a higher carb so start with 200 rocks and you can always add more if need be. As far as crashing temp, the lower the better to help clean up the beer. I crash at 33F and serve at 38F
great video. I don’t have a fridge large enough to hold my carboy. Any issue with transferring the beer into the keg And burping off some O2 the night before, cold crashing it in the kegerator over night, and then force carbonating the next day?
LOL "If you dont like this video then dont subscribe, but check us out on twitter"
Cheers AJ!
I haven’t kegged yet but will have beer ready to keg the day before the super bowl. Would you recommend against doing it this way for the first time kegging? Or is it just as easy?
I recommend it doing it this way if you want to drink beer in 25 minutes
This CH is crazy but is a true hombrewer at the sime time
Hey guys! Nice work! But what I wonder is,how do you get your beer foamless with tap connected directly to the keg? can you give more info about that?
Id let it sit with co2 on at 8 psi for 3 days
HOMEBREW 4 LIFE then you disconnect the gas line,right? I got feedbacks about direct mounted taps,they have no resistance so the beer comes out foamy. Can you explain it more? I will switch to kegging but can’t decide if I should buy these or picnic taps at the first trial
Great video. I'm just wondering about one thing, when you were pumping CO2 in to the beer before you force carbonated, what was the psi set at and how long were you pumping C02 in to your keg before you began to force carbonate? Thank you!
10ish, it doesn't take much. You're just trying to force the oxygen out. Pump a bit in, the CO2 will sit on the bottom, purge the O2 out the top a couple of times.
Are you worried about beer getting in regulator when shaking
Not at all
Great vid. I had this idea in my head. Question: when you fill the keg with sanitizer, do you fill the entire keg? I was thinking about 2 gallons of Star San mix and them topping it off with water.
And what is the PSI pressure for the initial pushing of sanitizer? 30?
Yes and yes
yup!
Dumb question but should I leave the CO2 on at 8-12 psi or just turn it on when I’m planning to have a beer? My last keg i did the 12psi set and forget method leaving the CO2 on at 12psi and it overcarbed the keg. Fixed the problem by degassing and only setting to 12psi open the CO2 pour the beer and the close the CO2 valve.
And now all i get is foam. :( haha
Good work chaps.
I’ve just invested in the draft brewer flex system. Can’t wait to get started.
Big middle finger to bottling from now on 🖕🏼
Cheers 🍺
hell yes! Cheers!
What do you think of the force carb lids for kegs?
What happens if you forget the cold crash step? I gave the corny keg 25-30 psi for 200 seconds when it was room temp and put it in the fridge. Is it going to be overcarbed?
"CH is in the bathroom taking a dump" hahaha
Quick question after your done rocking the keg and let in sit for for 30mins do you purge the keg down to zero psi and then put the gas on to serving pressure or do you just purge down to 8psi attach gas at 8psi and serve.
After 30 minutes (and disconnected), purge the keg. Then reconnect co2 hose and set regulator to 8-12 psi. - Big Dog
This video helped me a huge bit with my first ever keg of beer this week. I have bubbles in the beer line, any suggestions on what may have caused it and how I can rid the line of bubbles?
They were force carbing at 25-30 PSI. You'll want to reduce that pressure when you serve, down from 5 to 12 PSI. Also a lot depends on the style of beer and of the temperature of your beer and the line. Also the length and diameter of your beer line can affect the amount of foaming. You can find a lot more info with a Google search, but it can be fun just to tinker with it until you've got it dialed.
cheers mate! your comment helped. I tinkered until I got it right, had a fun hangover yesterday
Great video!
How do you avoid suck back of oxygen when cold crashing?
put a big balloon or sealed back around the top of the fermenter
Awesome video! Quick question, does the foam coming out of the keg when you’re racking mean there’s still sanitizer in the keg and is that bad?
Dont fear the foam sam! 😢
@@HOMEBREW4LIFE Roger that! Thanks again for the awesome videos. Cheers!
Cheers sam! 🍺