In my quest to keep as much O2 away from my hoppy beers as possible I have discovered a source of considerable ingress is during cold crashing.
Post fermentation, as you'd expect, the headspace of the vessel is pure CO2. When the beer is cold crashed to say 1 or 2 degC the solubility of the CO2 increases dramatically and readily dissolves into it. That gas volume has to be replaced or you end up with a vacuum. Chances are if you're using an airlock then oxygen is pulled back through the airlock into the FV, where it contacts the beer (the air will mix with the CO2, not sit on top of it).
My question is, if I am kegging, is it even worth cold crashing? I imagine after say 4 days of primary dry hopping/diacetyl rest gravity will drop most of the sediment and yeast out - or would it?
Has anyone come across any DIY solutions to stop oxygen suckback, using a bladder or balloon of some sort filled with CO2?
I know It might seem pedantic but really do want as little oxygen contact as possible!
Post fermentation, as you'd expect, the headspace of the vessel is pure CO2. When the beer is cold crashed to say 1 or 2 degC the solubility of the CO2 increases dramatically and readily dissolves into it. That gas volume has to be replaced or you end up with a vacuum. Chances are if you're using an airlock then oxygen is pulled back through the airlock into the FV, where it contacts the beer (the air will mix with the CO2, not sit on top of it).
My question is, if I am kegging, is it even worth cold crashing? I imagine after say 4 days of primary dry hopping/diacetyl rest gravity will drop most of the sediment and yeast out - or would it?
Has anyone come across any DIY solutions to stop oxygen suckback, using a bladder or balloon of some sort filled with CO2?
I know It might seem pedantic but really do want as little oxygen contact as possible!