thespirit3
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- Joined
- Jul 21, 2013
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Hi All,
I've recently brewed my first beer from a kit. Once fermentation had slowed (actually, it seemed to stop abruptly over night) I've transferred to a pressure barrel.
However, I didn't have enough beer to totally fill the barrel; an air gap of about 1 to 2 inches exists above the beer. I understand fermentation should slowly continue (I primed the barrel with brewing sugar) and the barrel should pressurise over the next few days.
However, wouldn't the existing oxygen in the barrel cause the beer to go bad? I thought the air gap would be ok, leaving spave for a little fermentation 'froth'. However, the more I think about this, the more I'm thinking the oxygen filled void is a bad idea.
Should pressure barrels be filled to the brim?
Any thoughts?
The barrel is a standard unbranded model with pressure release valve. I haven't yet added a co2 injection cap.
Thanks,
Steve
I've recently brewed my first beer from a kit. Once fermentation had slowed (actually, it seemed to stop abruptly over night) I've transferred to a pressure barrel.
However, I didn't have enough beer to totally fill the barrel; an air gap of about 1 to 2 inches exists above the beer. I understand fermentation should slowly continue (I primed the barrel with brewing sugar) and the barrel should pressurise over the next few days.
However, wouldn't the existing oxygen in the barrel cause the beer to go bad? I thought the air gap would be ok, leaving spave for a little fermentation 'froth'. However, the more I think about this, the more I'm thinking the oxygen filled void is a bad idea.
Should pressure barrels be filled to the brim?
Any thoughts?
The barrel is a standard unbranded model with pressure release valve. I haven't yet added a co2 injection cap.
Thanks,
Steve