Hi Ryan, many, many thanks for your reply! :hat:I thought this may be an old thread and I could not find anything that really answered my questions. You have done so perfectly. I've brewed for years, I think one of my threads on here refers to brewing in the shed with the hot-rod car and literally dipping pint glasses into a dustbin! I'm a bit further on now. Yeah a bankrupt brewery (sadly) has donated 3 pins to my cause. Along with a box of bits - shives, keystones, a few spiles (I think they are called) and two taps, a plastic and a wooden one.
Anyway to cut a long story a bit shorter, I've brewed for years, and this year we (a few mates) have decided to try 'real ale' from a cask. I have no problem with the brewing, I have a 3 vessel set-up and brew all-grain. My efficiency is usually around the 80 - 85% mark and I get good results, which everyone says would compete well with any of our local breweries. Normally I bottle everything, I'm not a fan of spending huge amounts of money on these Cornelius things, though they may work for some, I don't think they'd work for me. It's the gas and everything that I sort of feel a bit daunting (I'm currently drinking a Burton Pale Ale bottled last July).
So when 3 casks turned up I jumped at the chance. Now I'm bu**ered if I know how to condition ale in a cask! So I was looking for a bit of guidance on here. I can clean them, but then ... fill them up add a bit of sugar and bung 'em up tight. I am okay with broaching a cask, I've done that at our local beer festival, and hope to help out later this year as well. But I had no idea what fits between brewery and tapping casks; the conditioning bit.
I'll go with your excellent advice. So yes, 2 ounces of sugar in solution sounds okay to me. 2 weeks to condition, is what I'd give my bottles (unless my milk stout - about 3 months!), and then vent for 8 hours? No problem, sounds good and more or less what I was expecting.
Many thanks for the heads-up on this. I will let you know how this goes. It will be June before this actually happens.
Cheers
John.