If you forget you can always spray down with sanitizer really well, not the same but close. I'm not a wort chiller fan personally but I can see the benefit where the ground water is cooler than it is here.
Where do you live? Your user name doesn't check out.AlaskanAg99 said:
It's too hot to brew right now. Last summer I did, but this summer I just can't get motivated.
Ornlu said:Where do you live? Your user name doesn't check out.AlaskanAg99 said:
It's too hot to brew right now. Last summer I did, but this summer I just can't get motivated.
fav13andac1)c said:
Totally with you. My brew days typically start at 7 AM to maximize afternoon family time, but by 10 AM it's already 90+. At knockout it takes effort to not sweat into the wort before transfer.
Same boat.AlaskanAg99 said:
It's too hot to brew right now. Last summer I did, but this summer I just can't get motivated.
You carbed a beer at room temp? That sounds like a nightmare. You need to get your keg to 40 degrees. You'll never get a proper pour at room temp, because your pressure would have to be like 35psi for it to have 2.5 vol. of CO2, and pouring a beer at 35psi is not ideal.Seven said:
Maybe it just tasted funny to me yesterday. It's better today still not crazy about it but something different and refreshing. I need to get some co2 out of it. I carbed it up to the normal volume I like but did it at room temp over about 3 weeks. Now it's too foamy coming out.
If you had fresh orange juice in an unfiltered & unpasturized beer/rattler at room temp and <60 PSI, then the yeast started to ferment the orange juice. Unexpected fermentation would explain why your pressure was higher than you expected.Seven said:
Ya that's what I followed. I didn't have room in my fridge so I was going to let it sit and condition in the keg at 74 degrees. Figured 2.5 volumes is 2.5 volumes and it would be fine when I chilled it to 37. Just got to get it tweaked a bit.