I'm going to keg my homebrew for the first time today, i have been bottling and I'm sick of it. This video was really informative and straight forward so thank you
I was looking for a video about kegs from scratch, as long as i have no idea about how they works. I've found NOTHING useful on the italian hb'ing channels. I'm aware that in Italy we dont have a beer culture at all, so i always have to switch to australian or american channels to find the information i need in the right way, like this one! These videos from CB&B are perfect, as they're CLEAN from (stupid and annoying) YT music, easy to follow, the personnel is very very competent and the quality of the video is awesome: It serve the purpose, not like the videos from italian homebrewers...approximate and unuseful as they dont explain nothing (good and qualified italian hb'ers are very rare). Congratulation for the job! I Love CB&B videos.
Excellent Video! This has to be the best kegging video available, Thank You! 2 things I would've like to have seen covered in this video (kept thinking he was gonna say it) 1. After sanitizing.. What about that little bit of suds left in there from acid base sanitizer? What do you do? 2. What about sticking taps (one's that have sit a few days), from sediment/sugars. How to fix, the ways on how to prevent it, or at least minimize it, which connection type do you think is better? Not trying to knock it, i am just trying to help and learn at the same time. Much respect! Again thank you for your very informative video! 👍
Major Problem with video advice: The use of petroleum lubricant for O-rings. Never use a petroleum products on O-rings. This includes Vaseline, which is petroleum jelly. The petroleum will attack and eat O-rings. It can swell them very large so they do not fit within the grove or track on re-assembly. Use silicon or O-ring specific grease. DC-4 is mil-spec and designed for O-rings. Triflow silicon grease is also safe for O-rings. generally, a silicon based lubricant is safe. For food grade, look for NSF Food Grade lubricant.
Yep, he just wasn’t specific on this one point, but the product he used is simply called keg lube (not Vaseline or anything like that). Available at all homebrew shops for a few bucks for basically a lifetime supply.
Thank you for this tutorial. Very well explained and obviously targeted at people like me who are totally new to the whole kegging process. The thumbs down people obviously know everything already, which makes me wonder why they watched this video in the first place.
0:45 Bottlebombs happened to me, tis actually why I switched to minikegs. I keep my beer in my closet so I spent hours cleaning up beer and itty bitty shards of glass and I'm *still* finding glass eight months later.
Super good video. I bought 2 Corny kegs New Years Day for $25 each from a local guy that was moving; it was a fantastic deal I could not pass up. Your video gave me all the information and education I needed to get started making Draft Beer. Sweet.
Love the videos, also just saw the label on this corny keg and it said “clinton’s ditch bottling co, Cicero NY” I drive by clinton’s ditch every single day as it is about 5 minutes from my house. Small world.
Best kegging tutorial on the Internet! Thank you! 😊 👍🏻 Even though this video is 3 years old I'm hoping I can get one question answered. Whilst carbonating my beer at (say) 12 psi - do I need to leave my gas cylinder connected? Cheers... 😊
Hi. I was a bit confused. You said you want about 2.5 PSI to force carbonate but then said about 12 PSI at Sea level. Why the difference please?. Also, when the beer is ready to go, do you have to continue to pressurise the keg with the C02 cylinder to cause the beer to flow out well from the tap of does the C02 cylinder get dis-connected once the carbonation process is complete?. Thankyou in advance.
@@waskjohnson2033 LOL! yes, I have 2 3 gallon kegs and 2 5 gal kegs. built a 3 tap keezer from a freezer i found on FB marketplace. sweet set up. just too lazy to brew much, but i usually have something on tap!
If in a hurry to carbonate will living it at 30psi speed it up? Another thought I had is on this subject is if you run your gas In Through the Outdoor(Zep I went there) for a couple of days and give it a purge every now and then, then switch it back before you pour?
Your course is very informative and I enjoyed it I just want to say to be sure that buying co2 it comes from a supplier that follows FDA guidelines and tracking and notification if they get a bad batch. I am new to home brew but I install co2 systems for bars restraunts and breweries
Thanks for the video. Very helpful! Now I know how I can save time by carbonating the beer in the cooler. Only 4 weeks from Brewday to the tasting, is that true?
Great video - I have 2 pin lock corny kegs I got from a retired home brewer and want to use but it is my 1st time kegging ... do you have a video or tips on how to clean, tap and or disassemble the pin lock keg?? Thanks at least from your video I know what type I have.
Another quick tip, 70% Iso will take out any smells. I've had a hell of a time trying to get soda odors out of these kegs... soak all small parts in 70% iso for 10 min and throw about a cup in the keg and shake a few times to get rid of odors. Rinse with COLD water (the last thing you want is a bathroom or kitchen full of rubbing alcohol steam) at least thrice, then reassemble and sanitize as normal.
Also... I always pump a little CO2 into the keg when it's full of sanitizer and purge some sanitizer up through the dip tube under pressure to make sure it really gets into the tube and poppets. Cheers!
The CO2 will be absorbed into solution much faster if it’s colder but it will generally work in a ‘cool’ place too - it will just take longer to carbonate.
Star-san sanitizes, it doesn't clean. Soap to clean, star-san to kill anything else. Bleach does both -- but even a small amount will kill any yeast colony you put in there via the chlorine
I am a bit confused with the carbonation. Do I have to leave the CO2 connected during the 2 weeks so the beer absorbs it? I think I do but I am not 100% sure. I appreciate the help and apologize for the dumb question. Lol. Cheers!
As soon as your beer is ready, can you remove the CO2 canister or is it necessary to keep attached to pressurize the beer to have it flow out? I'm looking to keg my own beer for a few hour event and would like if I didn't have to have a CO2 canister to travel along with me.
@@AshyBeccaable You could get a hand pump from your local liquor store or online but it will push oxygen into the keg and skunk it quickly. (depending on your keg type, something like this - www.amazon.com/MRbrew-American-System-Picnic-Chrome-Plated/dp/B07YV341NZ)
Hey Dave, great video! I have a quick questions and I hope you can help me out... Im looking to start putting my beer in kegs. I really want to go ball lock but found a great deal on two pinlock. Can I swap the fittings on the kegs for ball lock or should I just go with pinlock? Is one better than the other?
Amazing video! Thank you! I may rack up a few views on just this video to make sure nothing has been missed! Checking out your other videos now. Subbed!
I'm looking to keg soon but am confused about something. You shot 30 psi to seat. Then you added 15 to force carb? Is there still not 30 PSI in the keg?
He does purge it, however, if the beer is flat, that 30 psi is mostly in the headspace, and will dissolve into the liquid, which will eventually decrease the psi to 15 again.
That is definitely best practice. It is possible to overcharge (put it at 30psi) it and disconnect CO2, then come back a day later and see how much has gone into solution - this way is tedious and error prone though.
Brilliant tutorial The best out there and Iv seen a lot haha.. just one question that bothers me. do I need to put the Co2 tank in the fridge as well ? does it make any difference ? cheers
What is your opinion of the modified lids with the 3rd gas port and a air stone, on the end of a 2 ft. piece of tubing, for carbonating the keg ? Saw these on Amazon. Thanks, Lee, Indianaolis
Dude, I've seen a lot of you Americans do it the hard way with siphoning. All my fermenters have a spigot tap attached to them . Google image plastic spigot tap. 1/2" hole about 1" from the bottom of the bucket to stop the trub flowing in and good to go.
i'm brand new to brewing, and i was thinking along the same lines, that if you had a tap about an inch off the bottom, you would not need to bother with the siphon
Better to start the siphon above the yeast and avoid as much yeast transfer, but, guess you can just dump a few glasses. Better to fill the keg w CO2 to purge O2 before transfer. I know you’re keeping it simple, but, obviously one has to have the CO2 hooked up anyway to keg..might as well teach how to purge the keg.
The Weihenstephaner Abbey, oldest brewery in the world, and its history is amazing and the beers taste good too, as i see you know. Good educational video. #p3brews
Yes, the CO2 tank needs to be connected to the keg and set to an appropriate "serving pressure" when serving the beer. That's how the beer is pushed out of the keg and into your glass.
I'm going to keg my homebrew for the first time today, i have been bottling and I'm sick of it. This video was really informative and straight forward so thank you
I was looking for a video about kegs from scratch, as long as i have no idea about how they works. I've found NOTHING useful on the italian hb'ing channels. I'm aware that in Italy we dont have a beer culture at all, so i always have to switch to australian or american channels to find the information i need in the right way, like this one! These videos from CB&B are perfect, as they're CLEAN from (stupid and annoying) YT music, easy to follow, the personnel is very very competent and the quality of the video is awesome: It serve the purpose, not like the videos from italian homebrewers...approximate and unuseful as they dont explain nothing (good and qualified italian hb'ers are very rare). Congratulation for the job! I Love CB&B videos.
Excellent Video! This has to be the best kegging video available, Thank You!
2 things I would've like to have seen covered in this video (kept thinking he was gonna say it)
1. After sanitizing.. What about that little bit of suds left in there from acid base sanitizer? What do you do?
2. What about sticking taps (one's that have sit a few days), from sediment/sugars. How to fix, the ways on how to prevent it, or at least minimize it, which connection type do you think is better?
Not trying to knock it, i am just trying to help and learn at the same time. Much respect! Again thank you for your very informative video! 👍
Fantastic overview. I'm a new kegger and this is the most comprehensive tutorial I've seen.
Sir I all so making beer tower in india
This was useful to me as a refresher when I started to put beer in kegs again after 15 years away.
Major Problem with video advice: The use of petroleum lubricant for O-rings. Never use a petroleum products on O-rings. This includes Vaseline, which is petroleum jelly. The petroleum will attack and eat O-rings. It can swell them very large so they do not fit within the grove or track on re-assembly. Use silicon or O-ring specific grease. DC-4 is mil-spec and designed for O-rings. Triflow silicon grease is also safe for O-rings. generally, a silicon based lubricant is safe. For food grade, look for NSF Food Grade lubricant.
Thanks 😊
Yep, he just wasn’t specific on this one point, but the product he used is simply called keg lube (not Vaseline or anything like that). Available at all homebrew shops for a few bucks for basically a lifetime supply.
Picking up a 3-tap system today and so far this is easily the most informative video I have found. Thanks!
This was probably the most well informed lesson, that covered everything pertaining to kegs. It was a great refresher course for me. Thanks a million.
However, the sad part is you needed a refresher for the minimal info that is required to operate a keg. lol
Thank you for this tutorial. Very well explained and obviously targeted at people like me who are totally new to the whole kegging process. The thumbs down people obviously know everything already, which makes me wonder why they watched this video in the first place.
0:45 Bottlebombs happened to me, tis actually why I switched to minikegs. I keep my beer in my closet so I spent hours cleaning up beer and itty bitty shards of glass and I'm *still* finding glass eight months later.
Excellent. Really beginner friendly
Super good video. I bought 2 Corny kegs New Years Day for $25 each from a local guy that was moving; it was a fantastic deal I could not pass up. Your video gave me all the information and education I needed to get started making Draft Beer. Sweet.
Love the videos, also just saw the label on this corny keg and it said “clinton’s ditch bottling co, Cicero NY” I drive by clinton’s ditch every single day as it is about 5 minutes from my house. Small world.
Very detailed and meticulously thorough. Thank you!
Best kegging tutorial on the Internet!
Thank you! 😊 👍🏻
Even though this video is 3 years old I'm hoping I can get one question answered.
Whilst carbonating my beer at (say) 12 psi - do I need to leave my gas cylinder connected?
Cheers... 😊
I like to put some sanitizer into a spray bottle to use on the small exterior hook ups etc. Everclear makes a great sanitizer for this method as well.
Excellent video very detailed, relevant and kept on subject whilst showing the whole process.
Hang on!! 34:08 Do you leave the same pressure setting for serving as for carbonating?
What about 'line balancing'?
All I get out of my keg is foam
Awesome! Simple, concise and easy to understand. Cheers 🍻
Hi. I was a bit confused. You said you want about 2.5 PSI to force carbonate but then said about 12 PSI at Sea level. Why the difference please?. Also, when the beer is ready to go, do you have to continue to pressurise the keg with the C02 cylinder to cause the beer to flow out well from the tap of does the C02 cylinder get dis-connected once the carbonation process is complete?. Thankyou in advance.
Is it possible to use a beer engine hand pump ( the ones they use in the UK ) on the ball lock kegs to draw the beer from the keg?
Nicely presented for a new kegger like me. Learnt a lot thanks!
Thank you! Very descriptive. Cheers!
really good video. just bought my 1st ball lock keg and can't wait to try it out.
Well, how'd it go? Still kegging?
@@waskjohnson2033 LOL! yes, I have 2 3 gallon kegs and 2 5 gal kegs. built a 3 tap keezer from a freezer i found on FB marketplace. sweet set up. just too lazy to brew much, but i usually have something on tap!
@@johnweller very nice, glad to hear! Just got my first kegging done on a 5gal myself. Have yet to tap it though
If in a hurry to carbonate will living it at 30psi speed it up? Another thought I had is on this subject is if you run your gas In Through the Outdoor(Zep I went there) for a couple of days and give it a purge every now and then, then switch it back before you pour?
Thank you for these videos helped me visualize what to do with my first keg!
Your course is very informative and I enjoyed it I just want to say to be sure that buying co2 it comes from a supplier that follows FDA guidelines and tracking and notification if they get a bad batch. I am new to home brew but I install co2 systems for bars restraunts and breweries
The best!! The best Keg and carbonating video!! Well and detailed explained. Thank you very much for this!!
Thank you! Great video!! Been brewing for about a year and anxious to start the kegging process. Can't thank you enough!!
Really great video, easily understandable even for novices! Thank you so much!
Excellent job! This was extremely helpful.
Thanks for the video. Very helpful!
Now I know how I can save time by carbonating the beer in the cooler. Only 4 weeks from Brewday to the tasting, is that true?
Great video - I have 2 pin lock corny kegs I got from a retired home brewer and want to use but it is my 1st time kegging ... do you have a video or tips on how to clean, tap and or disassemble the pin lock keg?? Thanks at least from your video I know what type I have.
Thanks for checking it out. At this time, this is the only kegging video we have.
Another quick tip, 70% Iso will take out any smells. I've had a hell of a time trying to get soda odors out of these kegs... soak all small parts in 70% iso for 10 min and throw about a cup in the keg and shake a few times to get rid of odors. Rinse with COLD water (the last thing you want is a bathroom or kitchen full of rubbing alcohol steam) at least thrice, then reassemble and sanitize as normal.
Also... I always pump a little CO2 into the keg when it's full of sanitizer and purge some sanitizer up through the dip tube under pressure to make sure it really gets into the tube and poppets. Cheers!
17:30, I have seen oxy-based cleaners marketed as sanitizers for one-step cleaning/sanitizing. Does that work, or am I risking ruining a beer?
Very informative! Thank you very much.
this holds up... 3 years on. thanks for the info!
This is brilliant! Thank you!
So when carbonating in kegs in not really quicker than priming? Both approx 2 weeks?
Excellent overview! Thank you.
Brilliant video, as I am just starting to keg, I found this to be very helpful and informative! Thankyou🍻
This video is cool I like it a lot I’m gonna remember this video when I’m filling up my first keg. Beer novice over here haha.
If you put the speed of the video to 2x, you can still understand him. Saves you about 20 min
if you are using iodine sanitizer do you need to let the keg interior dry before adding wort?
Thank you so much! This video was seriously amazing.
amazing! thank you for sharing all this information!
Wow! Great video! Thank you. Question, do you have to refrigerate the keg? What if I want to keep it at room temperature?
Then you will get warm beer
Does the keg have to be refrigerated? Or can it be stored, connected to the c02 tank, in a cool place?
The CO2 will be absorbed into solution much faster if it’s colder but it will generally work in a ‘cool’ place too - it will just take longer to carbonate.
@@pickles2000 right on thanks.
This helped me so much thank you 🙏🏻
IS Star-san good for cleaning/ sanitizing as well?
Star-san sanitizes, it doesn't clean. Soap to clean, star-san to kill anything else. Bleach does both -- but even a small amount will kill any yeast colony you put in there via the chlorine
incredible education here. Thank you!
Very helpful thanks
Great video!
I am a bit confused with the carbonation. Do I have to leave the CO2 connected during the 2 weeks so the beer absorbs it? I think I do but I am not 100% sure. I appreciate the help and apologize for the dumb question. Lol.
Cheers!
Yes, that’s correct.
Thank you Dave. That was a terrific video. Nice job.
This video was incredibly helpful! Cheers.
How about filtering the beer using a 10 micron filter rather than drinking yeasty cloudy beer? Can you pls do a video about filtration.
We have added filtration to the list for a future video. Thank you for the suggestion!
@@Beerandbrewing perfect. Looking forward to it
Thank you so much for making this video. Very good information
As soon as your beer is ready, can you remove the CO2 canister or is it necessary to keep attached to pressurize the beer to have it flow out? I'm looking to keg my own beer for a few hour event and would like if I didn't have to have a CO2 canister to travel along with me.
You do have to keep the CO2 on, otherwise, there is no good way to add pressure to the keg to push the beer out.
@@Beerandbrewing gotcha, and there's no way to attach a pump tap to these?
@@AshyBeccaable You could get a hand pump from your local liquor store or online but it will push oxygen into the keg and skunk it quickly. (depending on your keg type, something like this - www.amazon.com/MRbrew-American-System-Picnic-Chrome-Plated/dp/B07YV341NZ)
@@Beerandbrewing and what psi pressure is suggested for this beer flow to be pushed through tap?
Brilliant, thank you 🙏
Brilliant, thank you
If I am able to make really good cider and beer I will definitely get into kegging.
Thank you so much very informative!
6 weeks is a quick turnaround?
Very informative video - thank you!
Hey Dave,
great video! I have a quick questions and I hope you can help me out... Im looking to start putting my beer in kegs. I really want to go ball lock but found a great deal on two pinlock. Can I swap the fittings on the kegs for ball lock or should I just go with pinlock? Is one better than the other?
Amazing video! Thank you! I may rack up a few views on just this video to make sure nothing has been missed! Checking out your other videos now. Subbed!
I'm looking to keg soon but am confused about something. You shot 30 psi to seat. Then you added 15 to force carb? Is there still not 30 PSI in the keg?
I was wondering the same when I saw this first, but I think when he purged it to expel the oxygen at 27.30ish that equalized the pressure
He does purge it, however, if the beer is flat, that 30 psi is mostly in the headspace, and will dissolve into the liquid, which will eventually decrease the psi to 15 again.
Very nice excellent information. I am truly impressed. This helped me out for my first legging attempt.
Great video and info thanks Dave.
Do I need to have the co2 connected to the keg while it's carbonating for two weeks ?
That is definitely best practice. It is possible to overcharge (put it at 30psi) it and disconnect CO2, then come back a day later and see how much has gone into solution - this way is tedious and error prone though.
Do you have any written instructions. I am gonna try this
Brilliant tutorial The best out there and Iv seen a lot haha.. just one question that bothers me. do I need to put the Co2 tank in the fridge as well ? does it make any difference ? cheers
It doesn't matter!
Cheers Caleb appreciate
Drinking Weihenstephaner !!! Excellent choice!!! Great informative video
What is your opinion of the modified lids with the 3rd gas port and a air stone, on the end of a 2 ft. piece of tubing, for carbonating the keg ? Saw these on Amazon.
Thanks,
Lee, Indianaolis
I use sanke. Do one with those please
very very good vid with great info
Do you rinse after the sterilizing?
Honestly if using star-san, I've never really done it. It's at such a concentration it won't kill you -- and most people don't.
This is very comprehensive. Thank you for sharing!
Extremely helpful - thank you!
Use food grade silicone for your o-rings, not Vaseline.
X2. Do not use petroleum products on rubber o-rings. They will dissolve! Otherwise great video.
Dude, I've seen a lot of you Americans do it the hard way with siphoning. All my fermenters have a spigot tap attached to them . Google image plastic spigot tap. 1/2" hole about 1" from the bottom of the bucket to stop the trub flowing in and good to go.
i'm brand new to brewing, and i was thinking along the same lines, that if you had a tap about an inch off the bottom, you would not need to bother with the siphon
Better to start the siphon above the yeast and avoid as much yeast transfer, but, guess you can just dump a few glasses. Better to fill the keg w CO2 to purge O2 before transfer. I know you’re keeping it simple, but, obviously one has to have the CO2 hooked up anyway to keg..might as well teach how to purge the keg.
The Weihenstephaner Abbey, oldest brewery in the world, and its history is amazing and the beers taste good too, as i see you know. Good educational video. #p3brews
Your AWESOME 🍺
So glad I watched this! I can really put it to use for my brews/videos, cant wait!
Did you need to have co2 tank on when serve beer ?
Yes, the CO2 tank needs to be connected to the keg and set to an appropriate "serving pressure" when serving the beer. That's how the beer is pushed out of the keg and into your glass.
What is an appropriate serving pressure
Jeff Sandman It depends on the beer style as every beer carbonates differently. I would recommend you to set it at about 3-5 psi.
Cheers
great video thanks!
Awesome video, saved my ass! Thanks a lot
great job!
Fantastic!!!!
You need to purge your kegs with CO2 before transferring your beer into the kegs.
I was wondering why that wasn't done.
Well, and push sanitizer out through the dip tubes and posts using pressure..this also sanitizes the serving line..
Surely the 15psi will do nothing because you already Pressurized to 30psi to seat the lid?
I legit thought my screen was frozen at 28:15
I agree that a keg is great, but in terms of something going wrong, if it's a bottle, it's one. If it's the keg, it a whole keg!
good stuff
Vielen Dank
Brilliant 👍
That beer on the table got very lonely.
Till he poured it a friend, but they were destined to be much more and 3 days later little porter was born.
You're able to trust this man from the beer gut at first glance alone. You know he's legit 👍