Dry Hopping
- StrangeBrew
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These might be daft questions as I've never 'dry hopped' before so please forgive my ignorance...
1. Is there any possibility of infecting the beer with nasties when adding un-sanitised hops to the keg?
2. When removing the used dry hopping bag from the keg is it just a simple case of putting the lid back on and gasing up with co2 to protect the beer from o2 and to regain pressure?
1. Is there any possibility of infecting the beer with nasties when adding un-sanitised hops to the keg?
2. When removing the used dry hopping bag from the keg is it just a simple case of putting the lid back on and gasing up with co2 to protect the beer from o2 and to regain pressure?
- StrangeBrew
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Many guys here use stainless steel tea balls as a dry hop container, both in the keg or in secondary, which are the main two choices.
Mind you, I know one brewer who dry hops in primary exclusively, despite all evidence/discussion about this driving away aroma and his beers are certainly not lacking in it! He brews a lot of US type hoppy pale ales and they always have good aroma...
Anyways, the tea balls easily fit a good amount of hops.
Ross of craftbrewer sells them but I picked mine up at a kitchen store...
Mind you, I know one brewer who dry hops in primary exclusively, despite all evidence/discussion about this driving away aroma and his beers are certainly not lacking in it! He brews a lot of US type hoppy pale ales and they always have good aroma...
Anyways, the tea balls easily fit a good amount of hops.
Ross of craftbrewer sells them but I picked mine up at a kitchen store...
- StrangeBrew
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- StrangeBrew
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- Posts: 1046
- Joined: Sun Nov 12, 2006 7:07 pm
- Location: A shed in Kent
The ball in the photo is 5cm dia.
It all depends on quantity of hops being used I guess. Even in a larger bag the hops will settle together at the bottom of the bag and while suspended in a keg they don't move around allowing the beer to wash through them it's more of a static seepage process.
Not sure if that makes sense to you but I know what I mean!
It all depends on quantity of hops being used I guess. Even in a larger bag the hops will settle together at the bottom of the bag and while suspended in a keg they don't move around allowing the beer to wash through them it's more of a static seepage process.
Not sure if that makes sense to you but I know what I mean!

- StrangeBrew
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So what is the agreed procedure for dry hopping in a corni/serving keg? I have put in 25g of cascade into a 5G of Pale Ale of 4.1%. I put them there to add more aroma, but now am not sure if I want to wait longer than the expected 4 weeks conditioning as they pass the 'grassy' stage as Jim's experience suggests. Perhaps taking them out after 7 days might add aroma but not prolong the brew reaching optimum. How do the few commercial breweries that DH do it?