Siborg
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As the topic says, I kegged my first beer yesterday. Spent a bit of time prepping everything, but I'll explain my process and see if anyone can comment/ make suggestions for the next one.
I pulled the keg (corny) apart, replaced the seals and soaked everything in the keg overnight in PBW and rinsed thouroughly the next day.
Then I had the fun (it really was) part of testing it all out with water. For some reason, the beer out post on the keg kept spurting out water whenever I applied some CO2. I tried attaching and disconnecting the QD a few times, but it wasn't sealing properly. I replaced it with another one and it was fine. Is the post/poppit on this broken, should I buy a new one?
After playing around with the water, and even having a practice at force carbing the water, I decided I was ready to keg the real deal. Put a couple of litres of starsan mixture (diluted 1.5mL to 1L) in the keg and shook, then left for a couple of minutes and tipped (kept for later).
When I racked the beer from the fermenter to the keg (it had been cold conditioning in the fermenter for about a week), I had this massive snake of starsan foam coming out, but from what I read this is normal, right? The only problem with this was that I couldn't see the top of the keg or the beer level, so I had no idea how full it was, knowing that it had to be a couple of cm from the top. I think I got it ~95% full. Force carbed around 40psi, which I believe is around 300kpa. And it went well even though it took a few goes to get a decent level of carbonation.
Now: foaming. Its not too bad, but it is a pain to have a jug and waste a half a glass to a whole glass of beer before it stops foaming. Believe me, I'll be doing my reading on this today, instead of working, but can I get around this by either lowering the serving pressure which I have at just under 10psi and/or increasing the line length between the font and the keg? I have the line set at around 4 meters currently.
Besides the little foaming issue and a few leaky posts, it went quite well. Have to brew some more now. I even have my brothers interested and they've requested I brew them some golden ale... too easy!
I pulled the keg (corny) apart, replaced the seals and soaked everything in the keg overnight in PBW and rinsed thouroughly the next day.
Then I had the fun (it really was) part of testing it all out with water. For some reason, the beer out post on the keg kept spurting out water whenever I applied some CO2. I tried attaching and disconnecting the QD a few times, but it wasn't sealing properly. I replaced it with another one and it was fine. Is the post/poppit on this broken, should I buy a new one?
After playing around with the water, and even having a practice at force carbing the water, I decided I was ready to keg the real deal. Put a couple of litres of starsan mixture (diluted 1.5mL to 1L) in the keg and shook, then left for a couple of minutes and tipped (kept for later).
When I racked the beer from the fermenter to the keg (it had been cold conditioning in the fermenter for about a week), I had this massive snake of starsan foam coming out, but from what I read this is normal, right? The only problem with this was that I couldn't see the top of the keg or the beer level, so I had no idea how full it was, knowing that it had to be a couple of cm from the top. I think I got it ~95% full. Force carbed around 40psi, which I believe is around 300kpa. And it went well even though it took a few goes to get a decent level of carbonation.
Now: foaming. Its not too bad, but it is a pain to have a jug and waste a half a glass to a whole glass of beer before it stops foaming. Believe me, I'll be doing my reading on this today, instead of working, but can I get around this by either lowering the serving pressure which I have at just under 10psi and/or increasing the line length between the font and the keg? I have the line set at around 4 meters currently.
Besides the little foaming issue and a few leaky posts, it went quite well. Have to brew some more now. I even have my brothers interested and they've requested I brew them some golden ale... too easy!