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So I'm seeing huge losses with large dry hop charges in beer styles like NEIPA's (70 litres with 16g/litre dry hop). Clearly what's happening is the hops are absorbing a huge amount of the beer and cold crashing doesn't seem to compact hops sufficiently to 'squeeze' out that beer. Might do with larger fermenters where the head of beer above the hops might do this more efficiently, but on the smaller scale there is just not enough weight of liquid above the settled hops to exert sufficient pressure to recover absorbed beer. Obviously adding more pressure to the fermenter wont help as that pressure will equalise inside the vessel and not create the pressure differential in the same way as a tall column of liquid does...you'll end up with exactly the same pressure differential.
So I've had an idea......I have a hop rocket/hop missile....position this above the fermenter, load with hops and pump the beer to the top of the hop rocker/missile. give it a good CO2 flushing. Recirculate through the hops for 24hrs or so, should be sufficient, then stop recirculation and gravity will recover alot of the absorbed beer over a few hours since the hop rocket/missile will be positioned on top of the fermenter.
Challenge is pumping the beer. I've read some 'research' that suggests you shouldn't use mechanical pumps to pump beer around as the action of the impellers churning up the beer is not great for hazy beers with alot of hop oils and the mechanical action is detrimental to those beer styles as it helps to separate out haze and hop oils from the beer. So I've been looking at 'beer pumps', so pumps that pubs and bars use if they need to push beer a long way through beer lines where its not feasible to do it purely under CO2 pressure. They work by two opposing diaphragms that work together to create a pumping action and are driven by gas pressure...could be CO2 or compressed air. These can be had used off eBay for a sensible price and if it doesn't work in this application has other uses like flushing beer lines. So seems like that will be just the ticket and the plumbing should be fairly simple.
So before I press the button and have a go on the next brew any flaws in my plan? anyone done or tried this before?
So I've had an idea......I have a hop rocket/hop missile....position this above the fermenter, load with hops and pump the beer to the top of the hop rocker/missile. give it a good CO2 flushing. Recirculate through the hops for 24hrs or so, should be sufficient, then stop recirculation and gravity will recover alot of the absorbed beer over a few hours since the hop rocket/missile will be positioned on top of the fermenter.
Challenge is pumping the beer. I've read some 'research' that suggests you shouldn't use mechanical pumps to pump beer around as the action of the impellers churning up the beer is not great for hazy beers with alot of hop oils and the mechanical action is detrimental to those beer styles as it helps to separate out haze and hop oils from the beer. So I've been looking at 'beer pumps', so pumps that pubs and bars use if they need to push beer a long way through beer lines where its not feasible to do it purely under CO2 pressure. They work by two opposing diaphragms that work together to create a pumping action and are driven by gas pressure...could be CO2 or compressed air. These can be had used off eBay for a sensible price and if it doesn't work in this application has other uses like flushing beer lines. So seems like that will be just the ticket and the plumbing should be fairly simple.
So before I press the button and have a go on the next brew any flaws in my plan? anyone done or tried this before?