I wouldnt be doing that. We lost 1000 litres of beer at Kooinda one day when we did this. It was Black Saturday with all the fires. The pool would only chill the beer to 40c because thats what the pool water was. So we headed to the servo and brought 20 or 30 bags of ice that was apparently drinking quality. 1000 litres of pale ale down the drain.klangers said:Best way is to buy ice in the 5kg bags from your local servo or wherever. The ice is food grade and made from drinking water.
You see the issue with that is that you'll end up diluting it far more in order to cool it by the same amount.supertonio said:Use bottled water and keep a couple in the freezer to cool the water and not freeze it.
The concept of using actual ice (which is the initial question) especially for a kit seems unnecessary and not a problem I've encountered but again my location gives me benefits that the OP may not have.
As you can see from my reply I thought they were doing AG and therefore advised using a chiller for that, not a kit, which I agree would be nonsense.
Still think it would be to much of a risk and hassle whether it was AG or kit.
We have the same 'twangy' kits that you guys do.manticle said:Yeah I got you thought they were doing AG.
I only explained the kk because
A. Some brewers have only ever brewed AG
B. I don't know what kind of extract based kits are commonly used in Scotland.
Crossed wires and I agree there are easier ways.
QUEENSLANDA!
shouldn't you change the spelling to QUEENZLANDA......cuzzie?? Try to be more culturally aware please kjg.
Enter your email address to join: