Sugar in keg

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kieran o connor

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Just wondering if anyone has ever tried adding sugar to a keg (instead of gassing with CO2), left it for a few weeks to generate CO2, then hooked it up to the gas to serve.

I always save a couple of bottles when kegging, spoonful of brown sugar and stow them away in a cupboard for for a month or so then crack them after the keg has finished. They always taste different to the keg pour, more mellow somehow like they've been appropriately 'aged'.

It occurred to me the back of the cupboard approach could also be taken in a keg without all the hassle of bottle washing etc. Interested if anyone has tried it and what were the results?
 
Hey Kieran, yep that’s a thing.

A lot of the brewing software (eg Brewfather) will have priming calculators for kegs, it works out needing a fair bit less sugar (half the grams/litre) than for bottles
 
Ah interesting, thanks.

We actually had a shortage of CO2 here in NZ a little while back. Good to know there's an alternative option. Could then just use a regular compressed air cylinder for pouring
 
Ah interesting, thanks.

We actually had a shortage of CO2 here in NZ a little while back. Good to know there's an alternative option. Could then just use a regular compressed air cylinder for pouring
You could do that, but you'd need to finish the keg at a sitting.
UK-style casks are not pressurised and they draw in air from the immediate surroundings. A cask us good for about 3 days after it has been broached, then it starts to go off very quickly. I imagine something similar would be true if you used compressed air to dispense your beer.
It would probably only be good for trad milds, bitters, porters. If you did it with lagers and hoppy IPAs you really would need to empty the keg very quickly. On the other hand, if you've primed it with sugar and already drunk half of it, the rest shouldn't be a problem with the help of a couple of mates.
 
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You could do that, but you'd need to finish the keg at a sitting.
UK-style casks are not pressurised and they draw in air from the immediate surroundings. A cask us good for about 3 days after it has been broached, then it starts to go off very quickly. I imagine something similar would be true if you used compressed air to dispense your beer.
Just teasing this out some more...
In a sealed keg that's been pressurised using sugar, there will be a layer of CO2 above the surface of the beer. If it was hooked up to compressed air to pour, after each injection of air it would mix with the CO2 then once the turbulence had subsided, the CO2 would drift down as it's heavier than air and settle in a layer above the surface of the beer, acting as an insulation blanket and reducing the opportunity for oxidation.
Plausible?
 
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