Best way to store kegs.

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  • Опубліковано 18 жов 2024
  • Discover the ultimate keg storage method with Lady Fermenter. Watch as they demonstrate how to properly store three cleaned kegs. And make sure to stay tuned until the end to learn their top reason for choosing this storage technique. Beer, wine, cider, mead, kombucha if it's going in a keg, you need these tips. Don't miss out on more brewing insights - subscribe now!

КОМЕНТАРІ • 22

  • @seton005
    @seton005 13 днів тому +1

    I copped some flack on a Facebook post for this, but this is what I do. Strip and clean the keg. Reassemble and completely fill with sanitiser. Daisy chain to another if I have more than 1 (I usually wait till I have 2 or 3) so each keg is completely oxygen free. Then that keg doesn't get opened for 5 brews. I will rack straight into that uncleaned keg with the same or very similar brew. There may be some hop residue or trub in the bottom but that comes out first pour. If it was a particular hoppy brew and I'm worried about clogging, I may pump a litre or so of sanitiser in, swirl around and remove under pressure through the liquid port but that's rare. Then after it's been used like that 5 times, it gets stripped and cleaned and the sanitised again. I've been doing this for a couple of years and I've NEVER had an issue with this. Never had an off flavour, never had a blocked port and my cleaning / sanitising regime is cut right back. Some kegs have sat at room temperature between uses for over a month and still no issue.

    • @ladyfermenter-ThanksAPint
      @ladyfermenter-ThanksAPint  13 днів тому

      @@seton005 I say... If it ain't broke don't fix it. Good job finding something that works for you! Cheers

  • @tortap
    @tortap 3 місяці тому +1

    This has been said basically but I'll share my way. I fill one keg with starsan, connect beer-to-beer to another keg. This keg in turn is connected gas-to-beer to a third. So what this does is empty my next to be used keg of starsan and purged of oxygen. Fill the next in line with starsan to capacity. Any overflow goes to the third.

  • @jamesspinks716
    @jamesspinks716 2 місяці тому +2

    Great video, I fill my keg with sanitizer then pump it out with CO2 then I know there’s no oxygen in it. I don’t have many empty kegs to transfer it to though, ha ha.

  • @stanwalter9489
    @stanwalter9489 9 місяців тому +1

    Great idea!

  • @ShaheenGhiassy
    @ShaheenGhiassy 14 днів тому

    Neat!

  • @FermentationAdventures
    @FermentationAdventures 7 місяців тому

    Great tip! I do the same, except I transfer the star-san from Liquid out post to liquid out post to keep the foam down, and just turn the keg over for contact on the top of the keg. really limits the amount of star-san that remains in the keg after the transfer out. Works either way tho!

  • @1over137
    @1over137 4 місяці тому +4

    Did you just fill an empty keg with CO2 to clean/purge it, why? That will waste many, many ounces of CO2. Fill it with starsan and water first. Then use CO2 to pump it out at a few PSI while you do something else. This uses hardly any. You can also hydro-staticly pressure test while it's 100% full with virtually no gas, all the way up to 60PSI.
    Better yet. If you use a pressure fermentor with a ball-lock gas line, you can use fermentation CO2 to flush, sanitize, purge and pressurize (to up to 20PSI) with a single ferment.
    A 22L batch of lager produces over half a kilo of CO2! Yeast will be absolutely dandy in 1 bar/15 PSI and ferment cleaner. So... pressure ferment at 15PSI and use that 15PSI 'waste' pressure to maintain your kegs.
    If you cold crash the fermentor to 2C and can retain even 12PSI of the ferment pressure, the beer pressure transfers to the keg, fully carbonated already.
    You could process half a dozen or more kegs, ferment faster and still have enough "free" gas left to carbonate the beer it's coming from.

    • @ladyfermenter-ThanksAPint
      @ladyfermenter-ThanksAPint  4 місяці тому

      Hello, we fill with Starsan after the keg is clean and then push out. You are correct this uses very little c02. Thanks a pint for the additional information I bet many who have trouble getting c02 will benefit from all the information that you provided. Thanks again for responding. Cheers

  • @dden7670
    @dden7670 5 місяців тому

    I'm curious, how much CO2 does this process use up?

    • @ladyfermenter-ThanksAPint
      @ladyfermenter-ThanksAPint  5 місяців тому

      Honestly not much at all. I will make a note to film the gauge the next time we do this and let you know. My orher thought is I can ask at the welding supply shop to see if they know or if there a mathematical equation we can use to figure it out. Cheers

    • @dden7670
      @dden7670 5 місяців тому

      Thank you. The reason I asked is that refilling in my area is both inconvenient and not exactly cheap.

    • @ladyfermenter-ThanksAPint
      @ladyfermenter-ThanksAPint  5 місяців тому

      @@dden7670 I understand completely. I'm not sure if this is an option for you, but we found that a liquor store that sells kegs of beer, sells CO2 much cheaper than a welding supply store or homebrew store.

    • @ayetobee8461
      @ayetobee8461 5 місяців тому

      @@ladyfermenter-ThanksAPint you can make your own CO2 by fermenting brweing sugars in a keg, alone.

    • @ladyfermenter-ThanksAPint
      @ladyfermenter-ThanksAPint  5 місяців тому

      @@ayetobee8461 the reason we do it this way is because we know the kegs are cleaned, sanitized and ready to go. Might be a good option if CO2 is not readily available.