the.cassowary
Member
- Joined
- 1/8/23
- Messages
- 23
- Reaction score
- 14
Good Day Brewers,
Now that my "brewery" has fermentation control settled, I think my next step on the path to better beer consistency is a better bottling/carbonation procedure. My current process involves bulk-priming my brews by racking my beer into a second fermenter with sugar added to reach the required CO2 volume, and then bottling straight away using a bottle wand. I haven't had any major issues with this just yet, I feel like these extra steps increase the chance of oxidising/infecting any brews I bottle, as well as varied carbonation bottle to bottle, depending on uneven sugar mixing.
I'm doing some research on counter pressure bottle fillers, which (from what I understand) is mainly for transferring beer from an already pressurised keg into bottles. My question is this: If I pressure ferment a beer in a corny keg, can I then bottle straight from the pressure fermenter into bottles, or would best practice be to rack the beer into a second keg, bring up to the desired carbonation level, and THEN bottle from the second, carbonated keg?
I know, I know, just serve from the keg! But a) I don't have the room (or the $$) for a kegerator/keezer setup and b) Sharing bottles with friends is one of the main reasons I brew (my neighbours are calling me the local beer fairy, flying house to house, delivering little bottles of joy).
Now that my "brewery" has fermentation control settled, I think my next step on the path to better beer consistency is a better bottling/carbonation procedure. My current process involves bulk-priming my brews by racking my beer into a second fermenter with sugar added to reach the required CO2 volume, and then bottling straight away using a bottle wand. I haven't had any major issues with this just yet, I feel like these extra steps increase the chance of oxidising/infecting any brews I bottle, as well as varied carbonation bottle to bottle, depending on uneven sugar mixing.
I'm doing some research on counter pressure bottle fillers, which (from what I understand) is mainly for transferring beer from an already pressurised keg into bottles. My question is this: If I pressure ferment a beer in a corny keg, can I then bottle straight from the pressure fermenter into bottles, or would best practice be to rack the beer into a second keg, bring up to the desired carbonation level, and THEN bottle from the second, carbonated keg?
I know, I know, just serve from the keg! But a) I don't have the room (or the $$) for a kegerator/keezer setup and b) Sharing bottles with friends is one of the main reasons I brew (my neighbours are calling me the local beer fairy, flying house to house, delivering little bottles of joy).