sugarflux
New Member
- Joined
- Aug 9, 2019
- Messages
- 10
- Reaction score
- 0
Hi all
Is anyone using pressure fermentations (in the fermzilla or otherwise) who can offer up some advice? I feel like I'm making it up as I go along and wish there was a step-by-step / idiots guide available!!
My latest Pale Ale seems to have finished fermenting in my Fermzilla - this is my first time using the fermzilla and first time pressure fermenting. It's been in there 8 days, on ~10 PSI. I did a big dry hop on day 3, around high krausen, all new world NZ hop pellets.
It's also my first time with a keg and a CO2 tank instead of bottling.
Thanks
~S~
Is anyone using pressure fermentations (in the fermzilla or otherwise) who can offer up some advice? I feel like I'm making it up as I go along and wish there was a step-by-step / idiots guide available!!
My latest Pale Ale seems to have finished fermenting in my Fermzilla - this is my first time using the fermzilla and first time pressure fermenting. It's been in there 8 days, on ~10 PSI. I did a big dry hop on day 3, around high krausen, all new world NZ hop pellets.
It's also my first time with a keg and a CO2 tank instead of bottling.
- So, first off, do I need to cold crash in the fermzilla to drop any yeast/hop matter out of suspension or can i transfer straight to the keg and cold crash there?
- Assuming that carbonation has now happened naturally during the ferment, do I need to add further carbonation once in the keg? Or will I simply be applying serving pressure?
- Conditioning - am I supposed to leave the beer to condition further in the keg? Or should this now be ready to drink. It still tastes a little 'green' to me and very, very hoppy and fresh.
- There is a lot of hop matter and trub about a third of the way up the Fermzilla - I assume I will deal with this AFTER transferring the beer (and depressuring the tank)?
- Finally, what PSI should I be going for once in the keg - and leave the gas connected at this point?
Thanks
~S~