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Convert your Corny Keg Into a Fermenter

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  • čas přidán 18. 09. 2021
  • How to convert your keg for pressure and non-pressure fermentation.
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Komentáře • 185

  • @dschneid11
    @dschneid11 Před 2 lety +17

    I love fermenting in my cornies using a floating dip tube. I use a blow-off tube for ales and a spunding valve set to 10psi for my lagers. I ferment 2.75 gallon batches in 3 gallon kegs and I find Fermcap to be absolutely necessary. I've never had an issue with the limited headspace. When fermentation is finished, I perform a closed-loop pressure transfer to a clean and sanitized serving keg, using pressure from the serving keg to push the beer out of the fermentation keg. My beers have been consistently better since I started fermenting in my cornies!

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      Awesome to hear!! 👍🍻

    • @mcghee979
      @mcghee979 Před 2 lety

      Thanks for making this comment. I am about to start fermenting in cornies and have the same plan. Ferment in two separate containers (that have floating tubes) then combine into one for serving (that also has a floating tube). I intend to harvest and clean yeast, this will be my first experience with that. I just bough my first liquid yeast.. I'd like to avoid paying that cost regularly.

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      Good ideas. 👍🍻

    • @tman9338
      @tman9338 Před 2 lety

      How much feral / 5 gal Corney??

  • @JH-ms3ny
    @JH-ms3ny Před 2 lety +16

    Great video! I've been fermenting in corny kegs for about a year now and they've become my favorite fermenters by far. Most of my batches are 4 gallons or less so I've never been worried about headspace, but the tip with the 1/2" silicone tubing on the PRV is a great idea for those trying to fit a bit more in their keg.
    For my pressurized lager fermentations, I use a spunding valve set to around 15psi and have had great results with that. For non-pressurized fermentations, I have a couple gas disconnects connected to short pieces of bent SS tubing and S-airlocks, so I can pop those on and off my keg as needed.
    If I ferment in my corny kegs, 99% of the time I'm serving directly from them as well with floating dip tubes. If I'm taking the beer to an event, I'll jump from that keg to a clean, purged serving keg. I put a 3/8" SS hex nut on the end of the tubing right near the ball float to make sure the tubing end stays submerged, and when serving from a keg that I've dry-hopped, I put the small filter on the end of the dip tubing. It's great to have less vessels to clean, and reduced oxidization. My NEIPA's have gone weeks with no noticeable oxidization or color changes, and haven't noticed any detrimental effects of having the beer sit on the yeast and hop trub in the serving keg.

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah there is a myth about leaving beer on yeast. I've had a lager on a yeast cake for 6 months with no I'll effect. Thanks for the comment! 👍🍻

    • @tman9338
      @tman9338 Před 2 lety

      What is the max time u have served from a Corneys?? Great feedback that you serve using a dip tube and the trub doesn’t cause off flavors

  • @richardbennington6289
    @richardbennington6289 Před rokem +1

    I see a lot of people for pressure fermenting now attaching the PRV to the gas post on a second keg, and using a jumper from the primary gas to the second keg liquid post. This serves to fill the second keg with CO2 (which is pricy now AND bad for the environment) so that you can transfer the beer without introducing O2 at all. Usually, a floating dip tube is used in the first keg.
    BTW, THANK YOU FOR CREATING GREAT VIDEOS! Seems far too many are hand held jerky unedited, uninformed time wasters. I appreciate how well done your videos are!

  • @itterman
    @itterman Před 2 lety +5

    Nice, I use 30L sanke keg with spear removed for 5g batches and 2" triclamp to ball long on top. Works great for PSI fermentations!

  • @brianeasley3515
    @brianeasley3515 Před 2 lety +7

    Really good video! I would say an easy way to do a larger batch is hook 2 kegs up together. I am doing a pressure fermentation right now, gas in to liquid out and a spunding valve on the second keg. Works great!

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      Nice tip!! I like it! 👍🍻

    • @tman9338
      @tman9338 Před 2 lety

      What is the volume on Corney #1 and #2 ? This sounds great because cold crashing inCorney seems to clarify better.

    • @brianeasley3515
      @brianeasley3515 Před 2 lety

      @@tman9338 you can split them evenly, once fermentation is done, cold crash in the kegs and then transfer both to one serving keg!

  • @jameshess833
    @jameshess833 Před 2 lety +1

    I fermented in Corny kegs for several years until I upgraded to Spike Flex+, but I kinda miss it. For a blowoff, I took a gas post with me to Lowes and found vinyl tube that fit snug on the post. I would remove the poppet and push that vinyl hose on to make a blow off. Even with 4.5 gallon batches, krausen would rarely push through. When it was time to transfer to a serving keg I would put the poppet back in the post.
    I also had no problems harvesting yeast. Although I went through several trials and error on my process, I eventually landed this: 1) push starsan out a hose from the future serving keg. 2) with a small amount of pressure, push the first slug of yeast into a sanitized jar, using the same hose until clear beer flows. Amazingly, it was usually only a few ml before the clear beer. It seems the yeast cake would hold it’s shape at the bottom 3) disconnect the QD from the fermenter keg to stop the flow, attach another black QD to the hose to make a jumper 4) transfer the beer to a serving keg. 5) when finished transferring, depressurize the fermenter, pour in 500ml or so of preboiled and cooled water on to the yeast cake to soften and dilute it, swirl it. 6) close the fermenter keg back up, pressurize and push to the jar. I did all of this without cutting the dip tube. I had a cut diptube handy if there was ever a clog but it rarely happened.

  • @GavM
    @GavM Před 2 lety +1

    I’ve been fermenting the full 5 gallons with no probs. Blow off tube set up like the vid will take care of any blow off. It’s usually minimal. A recent 13% Kveik barley wine blew off only around 100ml. I also don’t tamper with the dip tube. I don’t feel the need to. After a few days in the Keezer, the first pour pulls up the yeast cake then the beer is fine after that so no need to transfer to another ‘serving’ corny. I’ve also had great success harvesting yeast by using a sterile picnic/party tap and literally pouring the yeast cake into a sterile jar. Corny fermentation is brilliant. I do all my Weizens this way and any other beers that aren’t dry hopped. I have dry hopped though with success using a hop filter in the corny. Hang it in there with a bit of sterile dental floss for a few days. Make sure you have a steady flow of co2 going into the liquid post when adding removing hops though to minimise oxygen entering the corny.

  • @danpierce37
    @danpierce37 Před 2 lety +1

    I bought the Kegland 7.6 gal or 29L Kegmenter (low profile and 4” opening for easy cleanings) which works great with the Blowtie Spunding valve. also has a built in relief valve. Can use as a Fermenter or Keg by design...it’s sweet!

  • @hypnolobster
    @hypnolobster Před 2 lety +1

    My main fermenter is an old 10g corny keg. I've got a modified lid that I welded a 3/4" sanitary fitting in that I use a thermowell with, and I also have a floating diptube in there for transfer. It's the perfect fermenter.

  • @kickstar126
    @kickstar126 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks Brian for all the great info, I don't cut my corny keg dip tube, I just use a BeerBrite filter system when racking to another corny keg, in my experience 41/2 gallons is about right for trouble free fermenting, though I find with cider I can manage 5 gallons...Thanks again Brian.

  • @fryloc359
    @fryloc359 Před 2 lety

    Hydro testing is something you will need to take to a shop. It involves submerging the vessel in water, pressurizing it, and seeing how much it expands. I've never heard of hydro testing a plastic container before.

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      Actually you don't need to take it to a shop you can do your test at home by filling the vessel completely full with water and then connecting a keg filled with water and pressurizing the keg to bring the pressure of the water up to the testing level. And you only need to test it if you're doing pressure fermentation. 👍🍻

  • @willschmit436
    @willschmit436 Před rokem

    I have been fermenting in corney kegs since the mid-90s. I used to use pin lock for fermenting, and ball lock for serving, so I always knew which one had the short tube. I brew lagers in my kitchen, in Albuquerque with no temperature control all year round (85F in the summer) by using a spunding valve. I transfer to a serving keg, then pour out the yeast in the fermenter (leaving a few tablespoons) and pour new wort on top of it. I brew 2.5 gallon batches every Saturday, and I never buy yeast. I used the same "Cry Havoc" yeast for 20 batches, now I use 34/70...

  • @katelynschubert9324
    @katelynschubert9324 Před rokem +1

    The most budget friendly method of pressure fermentation is to monitor gravity and close the vent valve on your corny to achieve your desired Co2g/l desired. Keeping in mind your known actual attenuation.
    Cheers

  • @killswitchh
    @killswitchh Před 5 měsíci

    Good suggestion on the 6 gal keg. Looks like it will even fit in my fermentation kegerator. Just had a massive blowout through my 5 gal through the spunding valve.

  • @kevinclingan5630
    @kevinclingan5630 Před 11 měsíci

    I have just done our first keg fermentation and it has not gone well, I got an emergency call to come to our brewing room at the Shrine this morning, we have easily lost 2/3 of this keg. I brought it back home into my shower and it still keeps leaking. Thank you for this video, next time we will only do 4 gallons. I hope that is all that is needed to solve this issue. Blow off was our big issue.

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 11 měsíci

      Yeah the key to managing blow off even with pressure fermentation is temp control. Depending on the yeast strain. 👍🍻

    • @kevinclingan5630
      @kevinclingan5630 Před 11 měsíci

      I think the issues was that we overfilled the keg to 4 and 3/4 gallons and didn't leave much head room. I am also looking into getting some blowties for our next brew day@@ShortCircuitedBrewers

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 11 měsíci

      @@kevinclingan5630 gotcha! Good luck on the next one!

    • @kevinclingan5630
      @kevinclingan5630 Před 11 měsíci

      I reached out to our Shriner Brew chapter to figure out the problem, we put the valve on the wrong socket, just compounds my frustration for today but I won't won't forget going forward now.@@ShortCircuitedBrewers

  • @hipi66
    @hipi66 Před 2 lety

    Hydrotesting is done with water. Same pressure as it would be done with air but as fluids don't compress under pressure only thing that will happen in case of vessel failure is some leaking instead of explosion if done with air.
    (in case not answered already)

  • @HOMEBREW4LIFE
    @HOMEBREW4LIFE Před 2 lety +1

    i gotta get on the that floating dip tube train!

  • @adrianianna2868
    @adrianianna2868 Před 2 lety

    Brewing now in a spac branded keg I got cheap but did not use as it was too fat for my kegorator . It is 25 litres & I usually brew 22 litres , so enough headspace. Just cut the dip tube to about 5 cm & pushed on a piece of silicone tube &float with a filter (Kegland) & it works great ! I can fit it & an allrounder in my fridge to brew 2 at once. Use a spunding valve of course. Also easy to clean & should last forever. Cost bugger all.

  • @TheShacksDevon
    @TheShacksDevon Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for doing this video, great to see sound advice covering all brewing possibilities. I’m a small batch BIAB brewer (using electric) and use a 10ltr pressure barrel converted to take a Corni Ball Lock Valve to add a spunding valve to control the pressure. It works really well.

  • @vincelafore4281
    @vincelafore4281 Před 2 lety +1

    Hey Brian in regards to harvesting yeast from the keg. I have done it several times by just dumping some distilled water in the keg ( i dont have a trimmed dip tube so vertually just sludge and no liquid) swirl it around, put a funnel over the opening and dump it into a sanitized jar, my wife helps me do this part. Make a starter as usual. So far I haven't had any problems using this method. The kegs I have done this with sat in my keezer empty for 2-3 months. Just a thought to ponder if you need that particular yeast and don't have any. That's what made me try it. And it worked

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      Yeah that's a great tip! I never thought of that! Thanks for sharing! 👍🍻

  • @RiggerBrew
    @RiggerBrew Před 2 lety

    Great points for those who are doing 5gal batches or less. Some of the similar options for those doing 10gal batches before switching to unitanks.

  • @janrudolflohne
    @janrudolflohne Před 2 lety

    Very useful. I changed to the "kegmenter" for pressurefermentation. Also nice for storing beer

  • @koomber777
    @koomber777 Před 2 lety

    Your tip for cutting the hose on the dip tube also largely eliminates the dip tube hose getting tangled or flipped under the float.

  •  Před 2 lety

    Todays brew was full of experiments. First time doing no chill in a keg. I bought lid with liquid post and floating ball. Hot wort went into 2 kegs 16l each. Ill probably just attach spunding valve to gas post after pitching.

  • @jacobleblanc4474
    @jacobleblanc4474 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for all your video. I love watching your videos. It is verry instructive. I am new to pressurised fermentation and i would definitly try it with a corny keg insted of a sanke keg.

  • @TheBruSho
    @TheBruSho Před 2 lety +1

    This video is awesome! I have been wanting to do this and you answered a lot of my quesitons, great job!

  • @foleyu2
    @foleyu2 Před 2 lety

    You can absolutely harvest yeast. Boil and cool a water in a erlenmeyer, pour onto slurry in keg. Shake up, wait 15 mins, then push through a sanitised hose into the flask.

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah you know I was thinking as opposed to a conical or a cup like the fermzilla. A couple others mentioned what you said and that is a great tip. You guys are always teaching me new stuff!! 👍🍻

  • @Khaladas
    @Khaladas Před 2 lety

    I did 2 batches into a corny keg as a first test. I also used a floating dip tube from Fermzilla with a small mesh thing at the end. I ended up having to cut the tubing on this out of the box a little so it just barely reaches the bottom make sure it works properly, but other than that they seem to work great.
    For blowoff, I used some old gas line attached to the gas line ball lock running into a 2 quart jar half full of star san. Seemed to work great.
    I did try to different volumes, the first I did about 4.5 gallons, and there was no blowoff to speak of just co2 off gassing. The second one had virtually no head space probably like 5.25 gallons and there was at least a quart and a half of blowoff/liquid added to the star san jar. So i'd say 4.5 gallons is certainly safe, and you will probably lose at least .5-.75g at the bottom due to trub.
    I plan to pressure transfer to a serving keg using a beer line jumper (floating dip tube in both kegs) and just watch the transfer and when it hits the trub ( super cloudy xfer ) I will stop. Probably gradually reduce pressure as I transfer to ensure I can stop quickly.
    Getting roughly 1g+ less volume is definitely something to think about with this setup. The bonus side for me is I can ferment 2 kegs in my chest freezer ferm chamber, whereas with buckets only one at a time fits.

  • @ElementaryBrewingCo
    @ElementaryBrewingCo Před 2 lety

    Kegs are great fermenters! I use the floating dip tube. They make a little filter screen for it too and that works great as well!

  • @DavidHeathHomebrew
    @DavidHeathHomebrew Před 2 lety +1

    Nicely done Brian. I prefer SS over plastic myself. Great to see more of your Mame cabinet too :p

  • @Jason__________
    @Jason__________ Před 6 měsíci

    Thanks Brian. The more I get into home brew the more I find your videos more and more helpful. If I could like your videos twice I would! By the way, what is that arcade game you have in the background? I see it says sega Dreamcast on it. I am really interested in this. Do you have a video about this, if not maybe you could make one! Cheers

  • @randutch3860
    @randutch3860 Před 2 lety

    I've recently got into homebrewing and have now done three 1gal batches. Looking to step up and the major thing I've been trying to figure out is how to temp control my fermentation (I'm in FL). That lead me to possibly looking at pressure fermenting instead. That lead me here to a video posted only a couple days ago!! Crazy how the internet works!! It just knows haha.
    Think this is the route I'm going to go. Looks to be one of the cheapest and easiest to test out. It'll be a great learning experience and let me see if I want to invest in something more substantial. Appreciate the great info and look forward to more videos on this. Cheers!

  • @koomber777
    @koomber777 Před 2 lety

    Hydrotest is basically to fill it with water and pressure it up using water pressure. Depending on your water pressure from your mains you could possibly just fill it from a faucet,bleeding the air out and then seal it up

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      Gotcha. I looked it up after I did this video and Kee did a video and pressurized a connected keg filled with water up it to 5 bar! 😳😳 Scared me and I wasn't even there!! Lol

    • @koomber777
      @koomber777 Před 2 lety

      @@ShortCircuitedBrewers pressure is scary.

  • @SyBernot
    @SyBernot Před 2 lety

    The nice thing about fermenting in a keg is clean up is pretty easy and if your doing it right your beer doesn't see light or O2 until it's in your glass. Also you use way less CO2 like maybe 2/3rd less or more because your beer is already carbonated, your only using the CO2 for purging and pushing.

  • @SankaraHomeBrewing
    @SankaraHomeBrewing Před 2 lety

    Thanks for sharing. Great information. I did one batch fermentation in a keg. I can't remember the gallons exactly. I recall I was able to do a 5 gallon batch with no problem. I might be wrong on the gallons that I fermented. I did have a blowoff tube when I did it. I had an extra lid and ended up drilling a hole in the middle and was able to put a airlock in. I liked your idea of just unscrewing the pressure relief valve. It was a pain in the but, to drill a hole in the center of the lid. Cheers!

  • @tman9338
    @tman9338 Před 2 lety

    Luv the silicon tubing for blowoff

  • @jeremyeberle85
    @jeremyeberle85 Před 2 lety

    Great tips, Brian! I'll have to try the "airlock through the PRV" trick - I've just used a blowoff tube attached to the gas in disconnect.
    I've fermented a couple of batches in a corny keg - mostly 3 to 4.5 gallon batches. For one ~5 gallon batch (pressure fermented SMaSH with 2-row, Belma hops, and Lutra @ 10 psi), I also added some Fermcap-S to prevent too much foaming. Worked like a charm!
    -Jeremy

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      Thanks for sharing your experience! 👍🍻

    • @Duci1989
      @Duci1989 Před 2 lety

      To be honest I’d just take a piece of tube on a ball lock and lead that into a jar of water or something. If the PRV gets clogged for some reason you’ve got yourself a little bomb . Check out homebrewtalk for some stories on blown PRV’s.

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety +1

      @@Duci1989 did you watch the video? There is no PRV. to blow. It's taken out and a airlock or blowoff tube out in its place. Ball lock posts get clogged super easy.

    • @Duci1989
      @Duci1989 Před 2 lety

      @@ShortCircuitedBrewers oh sorry was having lunch and probably looked at my sandwich for a second too long, lol. I saw you pushing the tube on and assumed that you had pulled and twisted the PRV. ring.

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      @@Duci1989 haha no worries.. 👍🍻

  • @kevinpatterson6055
    @kevinpatterson6055 Před 2 lety +1

    Brian, great content again. I use the gas post and hook the blowoff tube to that in a corny. I haven't had to limit the batch size too much since I tend to keep my beer between 4.5% and 5.5% ABV. That lets me transfer from the fermentation keg to my serving keg by pushing with CO2 reducing O2 exposure. Was considering moving to a conical and glycol, but this is a pretty economical and simple solution for me. Also looking at the Spike trio, so paying attention to your thoughts on that system.

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      That's the 3 vessel HERMS right?

    • @kevinpatterson6055
      @kevinpatterson6055 Před 2 lety

      @@ShortCircuitedBrewers Correct.

    • @JH-ms3ny
      @JH-ms3ny Před 2 lety

      I've been toying with the idea of a long, tall glycol chilling loop connected to a corny keg lid with bulkheads for chilling the fermenting wort. I'm not sure if one is already being made, but I have seen similar devices for carboys and other fermenters.

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      Check out the coolzone jacket for fermenters. I have a carboy version abs the corny keg one as well. They work.

  • @CTP-bbq-HundHutte
    @CTP-bbq-HundHutte Před 2 lety

    I’ve turned 2 of my corny kegs into pressure fermenters. They work great the only downside in my eyes is the cleanup. I need to figure out how to build a good keg washer.

  • @dmmflys
    @dmmflys Před 2 lety

    Great video I need to revisit keg fermentation. I don't remember if you have done video on transferring out fermentation keg to another vessel but if you haven't would love to see one and all my options

  • @dogstockings4197
    @dogstockings4197 Před 2 lety

    Great video. No fluff and loads of clear info. Really want to streamline my process these days to make it as easy as possible but keep quality. Have you had any experience from serving directly from the fermentation keg? Fermenting under pressure in a corny with a spunding valve and floating dip tube (serving directly) seems about as easy it gets. Carbonated naturally (saves CO2), further reduces possible O2 exposure as no need to transfer, less steps, less to clean and sterilise... Autolysis (at our level) is mainly debunked by now too. Seems like a no-brainer really. I imagine in practice, minimising trub transfer from the kettle is essential. I suppose if you want to dry hop you'd need to transfer or bag it up or something. 🤔

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah you can do that..I'd recommend na floating dip tube for doing it. 👍🍻

  • @TheDuffman6582
    @TheDuffman6582 Před 2 lety

    I like the idea with the blow off tubing, thanks for the video!

  • @michaeltooke9164
    @michaeltooke9164 Před 8 měsíci

    Great video/info. Thanks!

  • @alexrocks135
    @alexrocks135 Před 3 měsíci

    Or you can use a ball lock with tubing on the gas side for a blow off. Seems more practical

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 3 měsíci

      True but it can get mucked up by blow off yeast etc. 👍🍻

    • @alexrocks135
      @alexrocks135 Před 3 měsíci

      @@ShortCircuitedBrewers I always disassemble and clean after my keg anyways. Put yeah you’re better off getting a 6.5 gallon corny and fermenting under pressure. They make lids now that have a 1.5” tri clamp fittings on the
      For hop drops

  • @danc1662
    @danc1662 Před 2 lety

    I do 4 gal in the corney keg and simply set up the CO2 connect on the post with hose going into a growler with star san. No need to mess with the PRV.

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      Cool. Glad that works!

    • @danc1662
      @danc1662 Před 2 lety

      @@ShortCircuitedBrewers Of course when I say that, karma gets you. Fermented a wet hop Pale ale with Briess Malt Gems Pilsner and Red X and probably collected more than 4 gal in the keg. Had active fermentation within 2 hours and the next morning I was 60% attenuated and the krausen was coming through the CO2 post. Needless to say, I unscrewed the PRV and attached a blowoff hose!

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      @@danc1662 haha!! She's like that!!! 👍🍻

    • @danc1662
      @danc1662 Před 2 lety

      @@ShortCircuitedBrewers Thankfully the hoses I use for my Spike 3-vessel system are the perfect size for over the PRV!

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      @@danc1662 👍🍻

  • @mikebeswick3420
    @mikebeswick3420 Před rokem

    I’ll give that a go

  • @malcolmgibbons9068
    @malcolmgibbons9068 Před 2 lety

    You read my mind thanks Brian

  • @gstelt3574
    @gstelt3574 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Is it okay to leave the floating dip tube in during pressure fermentation on the “out” post? Then when I transfer to my serving keg or take a gravity sample I won’t have to open the keg or worry about sucking out the yeast. Currently making my first lager under pressure fermentation in a corny keg with a sounding valve.

  • @PeteGarza
    @PeteGarza Před 6 měsíci

    Why couldn’t I swirl the yeast slurry after transfer and pour the yeast into a mason jar and harvest the yeast?

  • @1Venger
    @1Venger Před 2 lety

    Great tips. Thanks.

  • @crow13695
    @crow13695 Před 2 lety

    Enjoyed the video, I do have a question. At the beginning of fermentation you added a blow off tube or an air lock. Then later you added a spunding valve. I guess I got lost here. Do you take off the air lock , replace the pressure release valve, and then add the spunding valve? Or, if you plan on fermenting under pressure, do you just add the spunding valve from the beginning? I ordered 4 corny kegs, I will only be despensing beer in 3 of them, I was thinking of one of two things; using the extra keg as a pressure fermenter or using it to cold crash. Kegging and using kegs as other pieces of equipment is all new to me. Any help is appreciated.

  • @christianbureau6732
    @christianbureau6732 Před 2 lety

    Great video.

  • @apack76
    @apack76 Před 2 lety

    This video is exactly what I needed! I want to try to use my corny keg to ferment my next brew. Do you have to use the 5/8" elbow on the blow off tube?

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety +1

      You don't have to. It just relieves the stress in the keg connection. As long as the hose is long enough you'll be fine. 👍🍻

  • @brianchao6948
    @brianchao6948 Před 2 lety

    Many thanks Brian for this great video! I'll try keg fermenting next batch. And one question : Is it possible or safe to drill a hole in a keg and install a pressure gauge for beer force carbonation and storage?

  • @Metoobie
    @Metoobie Před rokem

    How about cold-crashing your keg, making more particles drop out of suspension?

  • @thehoppyhour6297
    @thehoppyhour6297 Před 2 lety +1

    Think i'm gonna need a showcase on what games that arcade has

  • @wtfoutdoors2011
    @wtfoutdoors2011 Před 2 lety

    How do you dry hop when fermenting under pressure in a Kirby keg?

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety +1

      You can do it a couple of ways. One is to remove the lid. My least suggested way. The best way would be to put hops in a sack and hold them up with a magnet in the bag and one of the exterior. pull the magnet from the outside and let the bag drop at the appropriate time. Here are some magnets that will work. amzn.to/3QKtAb8 food safe too

  • @JohnSchink
    @JohnSchink Před 2 lety

    Hi Brian, Couple questions. 1) using the PRV as a blow off, why can’t this be used to capture yeast? Is starsan harmful to yeast viability? (Actually always wondered no matter the FV) 2) By keeping the dip tube unchanged, couldn’t you use that to periodically pull trub and yeast buildup? (Although this might clog the QD post). I’m thinking about the Grainfather Jewel valve in their fermenter as they instruct to pull off sediment in a similar way.?.?

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      You can capture yeast just not like a conical. You can rack off your beer and then add distilled water, shake it up and then let it sit for about 5 minutes and pressure rack off the yeast still in suspension. 🍻👍

  • @waynebunker2071
    @waynebunker2071 Před 2 lety

    Nice video Brian! I have fermented a Mexican Lager in a corny using the shortened dip tube method under 15 psi at room temperature using traditional yeast. Fermentation was fast and clean with no off flavors. I did have some foaming out of the spunding valve. I use my all rounder mostly because I am enamored by watching the fermentation. Which of the floating dip tubes do you feel performs the best in the corny keg?

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      I've only used the one I mentioned in the video so I can say for sure. 👍🍻

  • @rspaulding
    @rspaulding Před rokem +1

    Why can't you harvest the yeast when fermenting in a corny?

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před rokem

      I was referring to a conical being able to bottom dump. 👍🍻

    • @rspaulding
      @rspaulding Před rokem

      @@ShortCircuitedBrewers But @6:08 your exact words are "one of the cons of fermenting in a corny keg is that you can't really harvest yeast" Why can't you?

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před rokem +1

      @@rspaulding you can. Just not while fermentation is taking place. Other vessels you can top crop or dump from the bottom.

  • @user-se7fp5qv2j
    @user-se7fp5qv2j Před rokem

    thank you for introducing the keg fermenting. I tried my first batch after your last video. but it seems little awkward when it hit the yeast layer. even if it is floating tue still the beer is not clear. wondering how can I solve this. looking for your reply~ thanks🙂

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před rokem +1

      Make sure you transfer off of the yeast to a clean keg to avoid that. 👍🍻

    • @user-se7fp5qv2j
      @user-se7fp5qv2j Před rokem

      @@ShortCircuitedBrewers Thank you for your reply. just to be sure, the process would be, I need a keg as a fermenter and after fermentation, I need to transfer the beer into a clean keg and serve it?

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před rokem +1

      @@user-se7fp5qv2j yes sir!

    • @doubleube5615
      @doubleube5615 Před rokem

      Add gelatin to the keg to help clear up the beer.

  • @mikeoxmaul815
    @mikeoxmaul815 Před rokem

    Brian, do you see any issue pressure fermenting a 5 gallon batch in a 7.75 gallon keg, provided it's purged of O2?

  • @rgregoryii
    @rgregoryii Před rokem

    Getting into pressure fermentation soon. Can I ferment in my keg and then bottle the beer? And if so what is the best way to do so

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před rokem +1

      Probably one of the best ways to do it would be with a counter pressure filler and you can do that directly from the cake

  • @beeroquoisnation
    @beeroquoisnation Před 2 lety

    Great vidya Brian, I must have missed this one when it came out. I have had this nagging thought in the back of my head for some time now. What do you think the effects would be of fermenting under vacuum?

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety +1

      You know I've been asked that before. I've thought about it. How much vacuum and how do you maintain it. Vacuum pumps are pretty expensive TBH. Interesting idea though for sure. Brewing in space. "No one can hear you scream!" Lol 👍🍻

    • @beeroquoisnation
      @beeroquoisnation Před 2 lety

      @@ShortCircuitedBrewers That's not exactly what I had in mind. However, I would consider placing a vacuum pump on the fermenter to collect and recompress C02 into a tank. Most pressure vessels should be able to handle positive or negative pressure.

  • @FermentationAdventures

    Any thoughts on the shape of corny keg to fermenter geometry? Just listened to most recent Brew Strong and Jamil thought it was a “giant mistake” to ferment in a corny keg because of it being tall and skinny, and the beer won’t mix well. Seems like a weird thought to me… I do buy it producing different tasting beer than in a glass carboy, but calling the vessel a “mistake” seems a bit much. Great vid as usual!

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah I don't have any anecdotal evidence, however I have a cornical and I have never noticed any difference in the beer. 👍🍻

    • @FermentationAdventures
      @FermentationAdventures Před 2 lety

      @@ShortCircuitedBrewers yeah, he was comparing the same beer in a bucket, carboy and keg.. there is a lot more differences there than just the fermenter geometry. I've read/seen plenty regarding fermenting in cornys.. never heard complaints about them... usually the opposite.

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah that's kind of what I was thinking! 👍🍻

  • @rufusdugumphry4405
    @rufusdugumphry4405 Před 2 lety

    I have only pressure fermented in my FermZilla Allrounder. But I might try one of my corny kegs. Will the Tilt signal make its way out of a metal corny keg?

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      I don't know for sure to be honest. Might test it before committing to doing it.

    • @903mdh
      @903mdh Před 2 lety

      Can't speak for the Tilt but I have no problems with my iSpindel signal getting out of a corny in my fermentation chamber (converted fridge).

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      @@903mdh good to hear! I have one one the way..

  • @theulsterexpat
    @theulsterexpat Před 2 lety

    This has answered my question re volume reduction/head space requirement of fermenting in a keg. I brew small batches and had worried about the impact of fermenting in a 9L keg effectively having to reduce my batch size further. I have since found 12L kegs which I may invest in as they are same price as a keg and therefore cheaper than equivalent size ss fermenters.
    One final question. Can you get away with pressurising the beer and serving it out of the same keg (effectively a uni-tank) or do you always have to push it to a 2ndry keg?

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety +2

      Sure you can serve out of the same keg you ferment in. It is a myth that leaving beer on yeast will result in bad flavors. I have let a lager sit on the yeast cake under pressure at room temp for 6 months with Zero ill affect on the beer. 👍🍻

    • @theulsterexpat
      @theulsterexpat Před 2 lety

      @@ShortCircuitedBrewers cheers Brian. Long term fan (Richard Brown) just updated my profile

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      Thanks Richard!! Good to have you! 👍🍻

  • @Steve-to5hd
    @Steve-to5hd Před 2 lety

    maybe a silly question, but if you were doing a NEIPA with this pressure fermentation. can you still dry hop?

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety +2

      You can. What I would do is either preload the hop sock and use a couple magnets to drop it in or. I would slowly let the pressure off and dry hop through the top with a light amount of CO2 coming through the gas post to help prevent any oxygen from getting in. 👍🍻

  • @madasinwat2
    @madasinwat2 Před rokem

    Will the beer be carbonated after pressure fermenting in the corny? Thanks

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před rokem +1

      Partially, depending on the pressure you ferment at. I usually find at 12 psi it's about 2/3 carbed. Chill the beer and put it on 30psi for 24hrs and it's just right for most styles. 👍🍻

    • @madasinwat2
      @madasinwat2 Před rokem

      @@ShortCircuitedBrewers thanks for the info

  • @rickmorty4921
    @rickmorty4921 Před 2 lety

    why you cant harvest yeast from corny keg?

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      You can. I don't remember saying you can't. 🤔

    • @rickmorty4921
      @rickmorty4921 Před 2 lety

      @@ShortCircuitedBrewers 6.08? I just buy Corny kegs. I'm not trying to be smart, I just thought maybe you mean that pressure lowers the lifespan of yeast.

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety

      @@rickmorty4921 oh no worries.. I've reused pressure fermented yeast with no problem. Sorry if it sounded.that way. 👍🍻

    • @rickmorty4921
      @rickmorty4921 Před 2 lety

      @@ShortCircuitedBrewers After a three-year break, I'm back in the game. A new place and I can't control the temperature too much. I hope that under pressure brewing will do the job. Best regards

    • @ShortCircuitedBrewers
      @ShortCircuitedBrewers  Před 2 lety +1

      @@rickmorty4921 good luck! Pressure helps with no temp control for sure! 👍🍻