Thanks. That's what I will try when my Sour Wheat is ready to keg. Putting 3lbs of blackberries on it this afternoon for a week or so.
Moxie said:
Looking into new fermenters which allow closed transfers. What do you all have?
Also, bought a $40 apartment fridge from Craiglist last night so I finally have room for a real fermenter under temperature control!
AlaskanAg99 said:
I wouldn't go stainless FB without the ability to do pressure transfers. Eliminating O2 pickup will make your beer last longer fresh.
62strat said:
When I see this:
All I can imagine is me with a wrench in there trying to hold that nut to tighten or loosen and scratching the inside to hell. Such a bad design yet such a simple fix.
Moxie said:
I'll definitely check out the spike setup. Thanks for the reccs.
Transferred my blackberry sour last night after pushing out a full keg's worth of sanitizer so that the receiving keg was only CO2. Excited to see how it affects the beer but it easily doubled my time spent getting all of the equipment ready to transfer. I need to work on quick disconnect parts and premade transfer hoses and connections.
Thanks for the idea, AlaskanAg99.
spike has some flex and CF deals in the bargain cave right now.Moxie said:
I'll definitely check out the spike setup. Thanks for the reccs.
those are used, and B-rate as well.fav13andac1)c said:
Anyone looking to get into kegging, this is a spectacular deal on Ball Lock kegs for $29.95. Lowest price I've seen, ever.
I've ordered from kegconnection several times and they are awesome. Texas company as well.
https://www.kegconnection.com/ball-lock-b-grade-keg/
If you didn't already move on this, 25% off spike flex and flex+ for cyber monday.Moxie said:
I'll definitely check out the spike setup. Thanks for the reccs.
This is the only way that I'll do sours from now on.lne2011 said:
Anyone have experience doing kettle sours? I'm hesitant to use lactobacillus do to infection risks. But, I came across this article that mentioned you can use lactobacillus in the kettle for 1-3 days then boil to kill the lactobacillus.
https://www.northernbrewer.com/blogs/brewing-techniques/kettle-souring-made-easy