As the craft brewery, what would be the main concerns from your end? I'd say temperature of transport/storage, and time since it was packaged.
Surely there's a simple stick on solution for these sort of things, similar to the postal shock indicators that mythbusters use for everything. There should be some sort of chemical reaction that you can use to judge a high temperature exposure situation, and time should be straight forward.
Doesn't help with how full the keg is, but is anyone really worried about that? The bar will just change kegs, and the sorts of bars that serve craft beer are probably going to put a different beer on anyway.
As the craft brewery, what would be the main concerns from your end? I'd say temperature of transport/storage, and time since it was packaged.
Surely there's a simple stick on solution for these sort of things, similar to the postal shock indicators that mythbusters use for everything. There should be some sort of chemical reaction that you can use to judge a high temperature exposure situation, and time should be straight forward.
Doesn't help with how full the keg is, but is anyone really worried about that? The bar will just change kegs, and the sorts of bars that serve craft beer are probably going to put a different beer on anyway.
Not a simple solution. Add in the heat stress applied to the keg at cleaning and filling, the physical stress of a pressure vessel through a logistics chain and trade abuse ... it leaves nothing simple to the efforts
I think the point is that any analogue solution for monitoring keg temp can not be monitored by the brewery, and its likely the brewery who cares more about the quality of the beer being poured, after all its their brand on the tap handle.
Enter your email address to join: