Werry
Re: Werry
Can you give a link to a picture of your barrell at all ? It might be a pressure barrell, but you don't know it maybe? Best practice is to use priming sugar in the 2nd part of fermentation. It won't make the beer FIZZY as such, but will give it a nice sparkle on the tongue. Drinking totally flat beer isn't my thing. As previous replies suggest, it won't last long transferring it to a non-pressure barrell, you need 2nd fermentation in my opinion, to aid serving, and to produce a head of Co2 to preserve it.
Mick.
Mick.
Re: Werry
Mate that IS a pressure barrell (if it's the one on the link below, yours has the normal cap though, which releases extra pressure) . Prime it with around 80 grams of sugar before you syphon or "rack" the beer in (dissolve the sugar in 150 mls hot water to make a solution, then microwave it for a minute or so, to heat it up to kill any nasties, let it cool, then pour into the barrell before adding the beer. Leave it one week in the warm, then usually 3 in the garage or colder area. But I drunk mine long before that.
IMPORTANT! smear vaselive on the cap seal, and on the tap seal, to ensure a good seal, not too much though, none of it must come into contact with the beer.
http://beer-and-winecraft.co.uk/images/ ... rrel01.jpg
IMPORTANT! smear vaselive on the cap seal, and on the tap seal, to ensure a good seal, not too much though, none of it must come into contact with the beer.
http://beer-and-winecraft.co.uk/images/ ... rrel01.jpg
Re: Werry
Although you mentioned real ale in your opening post you still need CO2 in your keg to keep it fresh otherwise it will go stale very quickly as oxygen will get in the brew.
The real ale that you may be drinking in your local pub, where they don't use any added CO2 other than that produced naturally by the brewing process, only remains fresh for about 2-3 days once the keg is tapped and open to oxygen. That's why when they get near to end of a firkin (72 pints) the beer can start to taste a bit ropey.
The real ale that you may be drinking in your local pub, where they don't use any added CO2 other than that produced naturally by the brewing process, only remains fresh for about 2-3 days once the keg is tapped and open to oxygen. That's why when they get near to end of a firkin (72 pints) the beer can start to taste a bit ropey.
