Thursday, May 21, 2009

Homebrew Digest #5554 (May 21, 2009)

HOMEBREW Digest #5554 Thu 21 May 2009


FORUM ON BEER, HOMEBREWING, AND RELATED ISSUES
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Contents:
RE: Priming (stevesveil-hbd)
Re: Priming ("")


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Date: Thu, 21 May 2009 14:14:20 -0700 (PDT)
From: stevesveil-hbd at yahoo.com
Subject: RE: Priming


I have a different question ...

After the priming solution has been mixed into the beer
can it stratify/separate? Do you need to keep mixing it?
Or is this just homebrew folk lore?

Thanks for any insight,
Steve Seeley
Shingle Springs, CA
Between Sacramento and Tahoe just off HW50

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Date: Thu, 21 May 2009 18:12:00 -0700
From: "" <chrisn at wt.net>
Subject: Re: Priming


I've been kegging for years now, but recently I've been priming my kegs,
mainly because getting my CO2 bottle filled has become more difficult.
I prime my kegs so I can use nature to carbonate instead of the bottle.
I will typically use 1/2 cup of table sugar, boiled in about 1-2 cups of
water, for a 5 gallon corny.

One practice I developed when I was bottling, but I have not seen in
this discussion, is adding the sugar syrup to the beer while hot; that
is, why cool it to room temperature? I'll siphon about a gallon into
the keg (or bottling bucket, when I was bottling), then add the near
boiling syrup. My reasoning is that a cup or two of boiling sugar
solution is going to be brought down to ambient pretty quickly when it
hits the beer, so what difference is it going to make? If it isn't
going to make any difference, then why spend the time and effort to
cool it?

Maybe the cold syrup has a harder time mixing with the beer.

I've been doing it this way for years, and I haven't noticed any
problem. Obviously, in the keg, it will eventually mix completely due
to diffusion, but I don't think the hot syrup is harming my beer. Is
there something I'm missing?

Chris North

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End of HOMEBREW Digest #5554, 05/21/09
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