danglebell
New Member
There's been a few beers that I've tried (commercial) which are not sour (can't stand sour, waste of a perfectly good drink in my opinion) that have a fruit (/flavour) in and I've thought "how can I do the same...". Had a look up and seems adding fruit/puree to beer with any sort of yeast in it is a NO and will result in a sour beer, not the framboise/kirk style beer I am after. I got some puree and my plan is to brew a beer as normal, when ready for kegging, put it through a kegland filter to filter out the yeast, into a keg that previously had the fruit puree added (and has been pressurised), then shake the keg about to mix it.
Any clues on how likely to be successful this will be? Does the kegland filter actually work at filtering enough yeast out that it won't ferment in the (cold) keg? Will the finished beer taste anything like commercial drinks? Also how much raspberry puree is enough for a 23l batch, read comments that raspberry is strong and to use less but not seen any good amounts of it listed
Any clues on how likely to be successful this will be? Does the kegland filter actually work at filtering enough yeast out that it won't ferment in the (cold) keg? Will the finished beer taste anything like commercial drinks? Also how much raspberry puree is enough for a 23l batch, read comments that raspberry is strong and to use less but not seen any good amounts of it listed
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