I'm currently in the "if I do one thing better each time I brew, things can only get better" phase of my brewing career.
My current fermenting setup is a standard plastic bucket, about 25L in size, with a bottom draining tap fitted.
Last time I brewed my 'new thing' was kegging the beer.
Last time I just used an autosyphon and minimised splashing by using a really long syphon hose that comfortable reached the bottom of the keg.
This time I was going to try minimalising how much oxygen touches the beer as I transfer it to the keg.
Looking at my setup, I could try purging the keg, then using a combination of gravity and feeding the displaced CO2 back into the top of the fermentor. I'm aware that I'd need to wary of pressures if I do this to avoid blowing the lid of the bucket off! Seems like most people recommend about 1PSI for this but I'm not sure how to measure this - surely if I'm using the pressure release valve to release excess CO2 it's also letting air back in?
Alternatively an alternative method I've seen is that I could purge the keg of CO2, take the lid off so there's still a blanket of CO2 sitting in the keg, and syphon to the very bottom of the keg as last time. With this I figure that whilst this won't be a closed transfer (semi-closed?) oxygen pickup is likely to be minimal, and may be easier with the current setup I have.
So some standard questions:
a) any thoughts on fully closed transfer vs semi-closed/blanket of CO2 transfer? Is there really going to be a massively huge difference?
b) what setup would make my life easier next time to do a fully closed transfer without having to worry too much about the pressure of the keg blowing up the bucket? (slight hyperbole)
My current fermenting setup is a standard plastic bucket, about 25L in size, with a bottom draining tap fitted.
Last time I brewed my 'new thing' was kegging the beer.
Last time I just used an autosyphon and minimised splashing by using a really long syphon hose that comfortable reached the bottom of the keg.
This time I was going to try minimalising how much oxygen touches the beer as I transfer it to the keg.
Looking at my setup, I could try purging the keg, then using a combination of gravity and feeding the displaced CO2 back into the top of the fermentor. I'm aware that I'd need to wary of pressures if I do this to avoid blowing the lid of the bucket off! Seems like most people recommend about 1PSI for this but I'm not sure how to measure this - surely if I'm using the pressure release valve to release excess CO2 it's also letting air back in?
Alternatively an alternative method I've seen is that I could purge the keg of CO2, take the lid off so there's still a blanket of CO2 sitting in the keg, and syphon to the very bottom of the keg as last time. With this I figure that whilst this won't be a closed transfer (semi-closed?) oxygen pickup is likely to be minimal, and may be easier with the current setup I have.
So some standard questions:
a) any thoughts on fully closed transfer vs semi-closed/blanket of CO2 transfer? Is there really going to be a massively huge difference?
b) what setup would make my life easier next time to do a fully closed transfer without having to worry too much about the pressure of the keg blowing up the bucket? (slight hyperbole)