Kegs. That's right, kegs!
One of the few irritating parts of the homebrewing process for me has been bottling the end product. It takes ages to clean and sanitise the bottles, then there's the racking off of the beer and adding of the priming sugar, then the bottling itself. Then you have to wait at least 2 weeks for the bottles to carbonate, and probably another 4 weeks before the beer's tasting at its best. So for a long time I've been keen to build a setup that would allow me to put my beer into kegs and dispense from them.
It's not as complicated as it sounds, but I have to thank the guys on the Realbeer.co.nz forum for all their advice, as well as other local homebrewing mates and especially Barry (who let me look at his setup and answered all my dumb questions).
The basic components of a kegging setup are:
- a fridge (preferably with a temperature controller so it doesn't run too cold)
- one or more Cornelius kegs. There are loads of secondhand ones out there, mainly old Coca Cola kegs.
- a CO2 cylinder
- regulator, pipework and connectors

Assembling the whole thing was not hard at all, especially once I'd spotted the plastic seal for the regulator that stopped the one leak I had. I've drilled a hole in the side of the fridge for the gas-in line so I can put the CO2 cylinder in a safe place down behind my bar. I use a simple picnic tap for dispense (no fancy font heads for me!) and it works beautifully. There's nothing like being able to walk up to the beer fridge and pour yourself a pint. And the beauty of the whole thing is the reduction in time between brewing and drinking! I can throw a batch of beer into a keg in about 10 minutes, gas it up overnight and start drinking it the following night (with the obvious caveat that beers tend to take a few weeks to develop their full flavours).





1 Comments:
a fire extinguisher operates in a completely different way from a beer dispense co2 cylinder as it syphons liquid from the base of the cylinder. A beer dispense cylinder draws of the co2 gas from the top of the co2 liquid. Using a fire extinguisher, would run a huge risk of causing the keg to explode and should never be used and you should never use a converted one.
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