Showing posts with label bottling beer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bottling beer. Show all posts

How to make jelly bean beer

Sunday, November 26, 2023

Did you know you can use Jelly Beans as the sugar for the secondary fermentation? 

It's an amusing exercise to make Jelly Bean beer. The effect on the beer flavoring is interesting as I found that different coloured jelly beans produce different flavours...

First up I would suggest if you are making a 'fancy' beer where you've paid for a more specialist beer kit and you have a pretty sweet hop combo in mind that you don't try to make jelly bean beer with that particular brew.

This is because the bean will likely over power any hop subtleties you might be going for!

However, if you're doing a run-of-the-mill beer kit then while you are doing your normal bottling routine, you may want to have a crack at making beer with jelly beans.

The jelly bean is a substitute for your normal sugar so acts as the carbonation agent in the 2nd fermentation that occurs during bottle conditioning.

First, a wee caution.

how to make jelly bean beer

It is very easy to over carbonate with jelly beans!

In my personal experience, you should not put more than three beans in one 750 ml bottle. Any more and you will probably get a classic gusher situation when you open the bottle.

So what are the best colours to use? First up, do not use the black ones if you like green beer that tastes pretty horrid!

In my experience, black jelly beans are usually aniseed-based so are not really a complementary flavour for beer.

That said, it hasn't stopped people from adding aniseed to beer...

Instead, for this home brew enthusiast, oranges, reds and yellows seem to be fairly fun flavours to carbonate with. That flavour is a sweet sugary taste - albeit one that doesn't overwhelm the whole beer itself.

Greens, blues and purples will be OK but the colour of your brew might be a bit off-putting! Maybe if you were making an ale rather than a lager then the colour wouldn't be too bad.

So yes, despite what you may have heard, you can successfully make home brew with jelly beans, just add them when doing your bottling.

Your results, however, may vary!

Did hear about the guy that brewed with Mackintosh lollies?

Why I'm never using Steinlager bottles for home brewing again

Tuesday, March 1, 2022
I was bottling beer in the weekend (a nice Miner's Stout) when for the 501st time, the Steinlager bottle I was capping refused to cap as the grippy bit at the top of the bottle neck cracked.

bottle of steinlagerYou see, as the pressure of the bottle capper comes down, the glass simply gives way.

I suspect this is a time / use-related issue. Over time, the pressure gets too strong for the glass and it simply breaks.

I've also had plenty of bottlenecks completely snap too.

I'm sick of this shit.

So I dumped every green Steinlager bottle that I had into the recycling bin. About 30 of them, collected (and drank!) over the last few years.

Good riddance.

But it's a real shame as the 750 ml Steinlager bottle is a really nice bottle to hold when pouring a beer into a glass. There's something really aesthetically pleasing about it too.

Don't get me wrong though, Steinlager is an excellent beer and one I would recommend to any discerning beer drinker.

So this got me thinking, what beer bottles are really good for using with homebrew?

Well, for this brewer, a side effect of the rise in craft beer is that there are a plethora of bottles out there to choose from.

I found that most brown bottles of craft beers in New Zealand are able to be capped really quite well.

But you know what works the best?

750 ml Tui crate bottles.

That's right, the other classic NZ working man's beer has the best bottles for capping homebrew.

While I'm at it, I found a great source of getting bottles for homebrew conditioning is by raiding the recycling bins of my neighbours!

Also, I'm still pretty happy about my discovery on how to easily remove beer bottle labels.

Effective Tips for Removing Beer Sediment from Bottles

Friday, February 11, 2022

How to reduce the amount of sediment in beer bottles


Once you've bottled your beer and let it condition a little bit, you may notice that some sediment or sludge has formed at the bottom of the beer bottle, kind of like it did in your initial fermentation device (that's called the trub).

This is very normal and is not an indication of there being anything wrong with your beer.

The sediment occurs as a result of fermentation. It is the residue of yeast and proteins and maybe some hops.

During the secondary fermentation round, the yeast has eaten the sugars, fermented and dropped to the bottom of the bottle.

Does it affect the beer in any way?

Not really.

how to reduce sediment from beer bottles

The key thing is that when you pour beer, you'll want to ensure that you pour the beer out fully but halt the pour just when the sediment is about to exit the bottle neck.

You're aiming to leave about the last quarter to half inch of beer in the bottle. Make sure your glass or stein is big enough to take the whole pour.

If you have to stop and start the pour, there's a good chance you'll stir up the sediment.

While the residue is quite drinkable, it will make the color of your beer go cloudy. Given a good beer color is part of the drinking experience, many drinkers will avoid pouring the sediment in.

In my experience, it does not affect the taste of the beer and it will most certainly not make you sick.

If you are keen to ensure you have 'clear beer' there are some tips and tricks you can do to reduce the amount of sediment.

You're not likely to remove it all but by using the cold crash technique before you bottle, you'll remove some of the post-primary proteins.

Cold crashing is when you place your fermentation drum or carboy inside a fridge for a minimum period of 24 hours AFTER primary fermentation has occurred. The chill causes the proteins and yeast to fall out of the beer solution and to the bottom of the fermenter.

Many brewers will have a fridge in their shed which they have connected to a brewing thermostat which regulated the temperature of the beer. This is a very handy trick for when you are trying to properly regulate the temperature of your brew (and it is so very important to ensure your beer is brewed at the correct temperature! Heat has an amazing influence on beer at various stages.

When you bottle you have two choices, you can bottle straight from the fermenter or you can transfer the beer into a secondary container by way of siphoning from one drum to another. In this manner, you are leaving the sediment caused by the cold crashing in the first vessel, meaning there will be less sediment in the bottles.

Commercial breweries, including craft brewers, will actually use a filtration system on their brew to remove the sediment. This process removes the yeast so they will then repitch so that the beer will carbonate. Sediment can also be removed by use of a centrifuge, which is possibly beyond the realm of back yard brewers.

You can also add what are called beer finings, which can improve the clarity of beer.

If you are brewing a Belgian style beer, it's important to recognize that Belgian beers usually use special yeasts and wheat so haze and sediment are normal for that style.

Here's a list of things you can do in the brewing process to help reduce sediment:

  1. Do your boil 'harder' so as to maximize the "hot break" – the coagulated proteins that float around during the boil.


Boiling your beer wort "harder" can improve the hot break, which is the coagulation of proteins during the boil. This can help with the removal of sediment and other unwanted particles in the beer. The hot break occurs when heat denatures the proteins, which then clump together and form a layer on top of the wort. This layer is then removed, resulting in clearer beer.


  1. Add whirlfloc or Irish moss a day or two before bottling to help with flocculation (yeast clumping together and then falling out).


Whirlfloc or Irish moss are fining agents that help to clarify beer. They work by causing yeast and other particles to clump together and settle at the bottom of the fermenter. This makes it easier to transfer the clear beer to the bottling bucket or keg. Adding these fining agents a day or two before bottling can help to improve the clarity of the beer.


  1. Before transferring to primary, whirlpool your kettle and give it a few minutes to settle.


Whirlpooling your kettle before transferring to the primary fermenter can help to remove sediment and other unwanted particles. This involves stirring the wort in a circular motion to create a vortex, which causes the sediment to collect in the center of the kettle. After the whirlpool, give the kettle a few minutes to settle, so the sediment can collect in one place before transferring to the fermenter.


  1. Don't try to transfer everything from the kettle. Minimize the amount of hops and hot break you transfer. You can filter at this stage; splashing a bit will help with aeration.


Transferring everything from the kettle can result in a lot of sediment in the fermenter. To minimize the amount of hops and hot break you transfer, you can use a strainer or filter when transferring the wort to the fermenter. Splashing the wort during this stage can also help to aerate it, which can improve fermentation and result in better beer.


  1. Delaying bottling as long as possible gives the yeast a lot of time to fully ferment.


Delaying bottling can give the yeast enough time to fully ferment the beer, resulting in better flavor and clarity. The longer the yeast has to work, the more it will consume any remaining sugars, resulting in a dryer and more carbonated beer. However, it's important not to wait too long, as this can result in over-carbonation or off flavors.


  1. Do a cold crash in a fridge.


Cold crashing involves cooling the beer to near-freezing temperatures before bottling or kegging. This causes any remaining yeast or other particles to settle at the bottom of the fermenter, resulting in clearer beer. Cold crashing can also help to reduce the risk of over-carbonation in the bottles.


  1. Add gelatin to improve beer clarity.


Gelatin is a fining agent that can help to improve beer clarity. It works by binding to any remaining particles in the beer, causing them to settle to the bottom of the fermenter. Gelatin is added after fermentation is complete, and the beer is then cold crashed to improve clarity further.


  1. Use a separate bottling bucket – transfer from the primary using a beer siphon. The intake is not quite at the bottom of the beer cake, so it helps to leave the yeast cake behind.


Using a separate bottling bucket can help to reduce the amount of sediment in the bottles. When transferring from the primary fermenter, use a beer siphon, and make sure the intake is not touching the bottom of the fermenter

If you need to remove beer sediment post-drinking the beer, a rinse under the kitchen tap is always very helpful but a 24 hour soak in a Powdered Brewery Wash solution will work wonders on your bottles

How to remove labels from glass bottles for home brewing beer

Tuesday, December 28, 2021
Once more unto the breach...

Removing labels from beer bottles can be the most frustrating exercise in the world right?


What if I told you I've learnt the secret of easily removing those damn sticky labels.

You'd be thinking I pulling your leg.

I'm not though.

I've done the research.

I've done the experiments.

I have scrubbed labels.

I have licked labels. 

I have OxiClean and I have used my damn fingernails to get those last stubborn bits of residue off.

I have also pulled labels off completely intact in one move!!

So much so, I hate beer labels.

But, due to my work, for you dear home brewer, I've got 6 or maybe 7 tricks and tips on removing beer labels from bottles. They are not magical fixes but they sure make things a lot easier and less frustrating.

remove label from glass bottle

The good old overnight soak


The first thing you need to do is accept that life is like a box of shitty beer labels, you never know and some of them are as stubborn as your mother in law after a couple of gins. 

Some labels will simply come off after a 24 hour soak in cold soapy water. Others will not even soften after three weeks in the bucket.

That's just the way is. Accept it, and you will feel so much better for it.

Yes, the most simple way to remove a beer label is to let the glass bottle soak in a bucket or tub overnight.

Fully submerged.

If you get a beer label that's willing to soak up water and with glue that dissolves easily enough, there are good odds you will be able to pull the whole label off from the bottle 100 per cent intact and leave no residue on the glass.

Such occasions are rare and must be celebrated by sharing your homebrew with your neighbours and workmates.

IF there is some glue residue, then scrub with a kitchen brush under a stream of hot water may assist in removal. Else, try a hot wash in the dishwasher. 

Baking soda is not just for making hokey pokey lolly...


If the overnight soak method doesn't float your label off intact, you might want to try baking soda.

Baking soda is like a magical cooking ingredient that housewives from back in the day is also good for using as toothpaste and removing axel grease.

Baking soda is actually a handy chemical called sodium bicarbonate and it's a true and time tested remedy - it will help remove labels. With your soak, add in a few tablespoons of the soda, stir and leave to soak for 24 hours.

If there is some residue after removing the label, a quick scrub with steel wool or plastic kitchen scrubber (think 3M cleaners) should do the trick.

how to remove labels from beer bottles

Ammonia


Did you ever see Robocop?

The first one, not the shitty remake. I saw that as a young lad and one scene that stuck with me forever was when one of the bad guy's henchmen gets his comeuppance with a bath of toxic waste.

It melts his skin right off!

Like sucking chicken of a slow-cooked chicken drum.

And seeing as that's how we really would like our labels to come off, let's ratchet the solution up.

Ammonia.

It's a hydrogen and nitrogen compound (NH3 is the scientific name) and it dissolves your label like it was human flesh bathed in toxic waste.

Be warned though, ammonia is a HARSH chemical as it is very caustic. Don't get it on you or inhale it and we suggest you do the soak outside.

It doesn't do anything to the glass bottle though, so it's a viable trick.

Never mix it with bleach as a chemical reaction will occur, exposing you to poisonous gas (from memory something like chloroform is created).

So maybe only try to use ammonia if you have the most stubborn of beer bottle labels. Before using the bottles you will need to thoroughly rinse them in plenty of water.

And then rinse again just to be sure.

So if the suggestion above scared you, let's slow down and have a think about some other chemical agents that might be handy.

When using chemicals such as ammonia or sodium hydroxide, we firmly recommend you take safety precautions and use disposable gloves and wear suitable eye protection.

Have you ever heard of Oxiclean? 


It's a massively popular laundry cleaner / stain remover. It's good because it makes whites whiter and brights brighter or something. Maybe it's good because one of the active ingredients in OxiClean is sodium percarbonate.

This wonder chemical is an adduct of sodium carbonate and hydrogen peroxide, the active ingredients of OxiClean and many other popular laundry soakers.

I typically use sodium percarbonate all the time and this is the actual truth, about an hour ago I was adding sodium percarbonate to a tub of beer bottles that needed the labels removed. As I was standing outside in the dark, garden hose in hand I thought, you know, it would probably be a good idea make a good post about how to remove beer labels).

So, I personally can vouch for using sodium percarbonate to remove beer labels.

It still can be a dog of a process though. If you get a stubborn beer label, you're going to need to use some elbow grease.

Steam cleaning


You could also try using hot steam from a kettle. We haven't done this but we think this idea would probably work if given enough time. If you had to do twenty bottles, it wouldn't be worth the energy.

PBW - Powdered Brewery Wash


This cleaning product is widely used in commercial breweries and microbreweries and countless home brewers across the country have twigged that they can use it for cleaning their own brewing equipment. 

Because PBW is so strong it will also make short work of beer labels as well. Give it a soak overnight and you might just be surprised at how easy it will be to get the labels off.


So in summary here's several methods you can try to remove beer labels from glass bottles:
Many brewers are waking up to how good alkaline brewery wash is as well. 

You could also try using a jet blaster but you'd need to be able to securely hold the bottles!

These tricks also work just as well for wine bottles but you will have to be prepared to get in there and do some scrubbing on those stubborn labels, it's just a fact of life.

How Much Headspace to Leave When Bottling Beer?

Monday, November 15, 2021

headspace for bottles

What level of head space should I leave in the bottle neck for homebrew beer?

We found this.


For a given amount of priming sugar, the greater the headspace, the lower the carbonation." - some guy on the internet

Let's explore what they mean.

When bottling beer, leaving 1 to 1 ½ inches of headspace is quite the common standard practice.

Headspace tends to aid in preventing oxidation and exploding bottles due to unreleased C02 pressure

Conversely, too much headspace may result in off-flavors. 

So, you are looking for the Goldilocks level of headspace, something just right. 

The science of it explains how there are practical effects on your beer. 

If you are leaving more headspace than you should in your bottle, the carbon dioxide produced by fermentation will not stay in the beer solution and will instead fill up the empty space in your bottle. The result then of too much headspace is that you may open the beer and get a comforting "psssst" sound but your beer could well be unintentionally under carbonated and taste somewhat flat.

So what's the ideal level of headspace for a beer?


Try to leave between 1/2" to 1" of headspace in your bottles when bottling.

Carbon dioxide is going to be produced in bottled beer because the yeasts will be feeding on the priming sugars in the brew. Having adequate headspace allows the gas somewhere to go.

Too much head space can cause a foul beer flavor. 


Why does this happen? 

Yeast utilizes the oxygen in the bottle (meaning carbonation speeds up with bigger headspace), and any leftover oxygen results in too much air and this makes your beer taste terrible.

This is also why when bottling you should try to ensure a simple straight pour from the fermenter into the bottle - often achieved quite well 
  
Indeed a bottling wand will help to achieve a consistently even level of headspace, When filling, you fill it to the very top of the bottle. When you remove the wand, the space left is quite the perfect amount of headspace - depending on your bottle size of course...

Another problem with having more headspace than needed is simply that you’ll end up needing more bottles since you’re underfilling them!

If you are using recyclable beer bottles, my personal choice is just to try and leave it at a leave that looks like what would have been the original pour from the manufacturer.

If you are really worried about oxygen in your beer you can also consider using oxygen caps.

Should I forget headspace and fill the bottle to the very top?


No way. 

Beer expands when allowed to warm up. 

Expanding beer creates unimaginable pressure (surprisingly far more than overpriming) that will either break bottles or at least will cause leakage via the cap if it is not sealed quite firmly. 

The amount of expansion will depend on how stable you keep your storage temperature.

Given this and we know that beer generally benefits from an apt amount of headspace, don't overfill your beer bottles. 

How to properly store and condition your bottled homebrew

Thursday, August 26, 2021
How to properly store your bottled homebrew beer


Proper storage and conditioning of homebrew beer - for better tasting beer


You've done the hard work.

You've prepared a nice wort, added some hops, maybe used a yeast energizer and a beer enhancer and it fermented well. You let it ferment in the drum for a good amount of time.

Then bottling day came and you got your golden brew safely away under the cap.

Now what?

It's time to bottle condition your beer and that doesn't mean you hide it under a blanket in an old swap-a-crate box and forget about it for a few weeks. 

Well actually you can do this, but if you want great tasting beer there are a few things to think about when storing and conditioning beer. 

I'm gonna assume you bottled, left a good level of space in the bottle neck and you've capped the beer and are ready to place the beer somewhere safe. 

conditioning home brew beer


First with the warm and then with the cold


When you are bottle conditioning, you are adding a second addition of sugar to your beer. This is so that the second round of fermentation can take place. 

The yeast still present in the beer will eat the sugar and convert it into more alcohol and CO2 - this gas is what carbonates the beer. 

So, just like when you did the first round of fermentation, the yeast does its best work at a warm temperature. So, to properly store your beer so that it is carbonated, the beer needs to be kept warm for a few days. 

The ideal temperature range is between approx 18 - 25°C for 5 to 7 days. 

After a week or so, you can leave them in a much cooler place with a temperature range between approx 8 - 12°C. This will allow the beers to condition quite nicely. 

This thing about the correct temperature is real. 

Let me tell you a story. 

In the middle of a New Zealand winter, I bottled a lager beer and left it in the shed for about a month. It was cold and the sun didn't warm the shed at all. It was actually colder in the shed than outside. 

When I went to crack open the first beer, I did not hear that usually reassuring hiss of gas as it escapes from the bottle. 

The silence was brutal. 

My beer was flat. 

So I opened another bottle and had the same result. And again for a third.

I wondered if I had destroyed my beer somehow but then more sensibly I asked my self 'had fermentation actually occurred'?

It had.

What I had done was wrap the fermenter in plenty of old painting sheets which kept the beer warn enough to allow the first round of fermentation to occur. 

For the bottled beer, the problem was the freezing cold. They had sat in the shed naked as the day they were bottled and bitterly cold. The yeast became inactive and no fermentation occurred. 

The solution was to bring the beers inside where it was warmer.

I placed them in the living room and gradually they warmed up. After two weeks I opened a beer and boom, I was rewarded with the sound of CO2 releasing from the beer. The yeast had appreciated the warmer temperature, came out of hibernation and got to work on the sucrose. 

Problem solved!

Conversely, it is unwise to store beer in too hot a place. For example, don't leave it in a hot attic room all summer. The beer will simply get cooked and probably taste like mouldy cardboard

yeast temperature for beer
Treat your yeast with temperature love


Two important things that can help with proper conditioning of beer:


1. Don't be afraid of the dark


Like a vampire, you should embrace the darkness. 

Beer does not like sunlight at all. Especially if you are using recycled green beer bottles. If your beer is exposed to too much light, it is said to be 'light struck' or 'skunked'. 

The UV light causes yet another chemical reaction in the beer - the hops are broken down by the light and they form a new compound when mixed with the proteins in the beer - giving off a horrid smell just like a skunk can do.

how long to condition beer


2. How long do I let beer condition for?


You have to let your beer condition. The rule of thumb is that your beer is probably drinkable after one week but is only beginning to get close to its best tasting at three weeks. 5 and 6 weeks is even better.

If you've ever found a forgotten beer in the shed that's had three months of conditioning, you probably really enjoyed it right? 

That's just proof you need to give your beer time to mature. 

When you are ready to drink your beer, remember it is best served chilled. This reduces the chances of foam pouring out from the top of the bottleneck. This is why placing beers in the fridge overnight works best for serving homebrew. 

Some points to ponder about bottle storage

  • It's really good to have a storage place where the temperature is maintained at a steady & consistent rate.
  • Ales are happy with lower temperatures
  • Lagers are happy with higher temperatures
  • The middle of your house is probably cooler than nearer the outside. That could be a factor where you store beer.
  • If you find your beers are in too hot a place, move them! Seriously, if you leave your beers in an area where it is too hot the yeast produces a really volatile ether (I think) which makes the beer taste like methylated spirits or petrol. I know this occurs from my owner personal experience - I had TWO fermenting drums wrapped in sheets in my shed in a NZ summer and they cooked and the end result was I had to tip my bottled beers out (I didn't realise what had happened until after conditioning but put two and two together). 

How to easily bottle home brew beer (and condition it)

Wednesday, June 9, 2021

How to bottle and condition your home brew beer 

So once you are sure that fermentation is complete and you've let your beer sit for at least a week after the bubbles have stopped coming through the airlock  (or more properly, taken a gravity reading), then you're ready to bottle your homebrew.

Welcome to the big league boys and girls, you're about to bottle beer!

bottle condition green beer bottles


What you need to bottle your beer
  • Enough bottles. If you have done 23 litres of beer then you would need 30 x 750 ml bottles. 
  • Bottle caps
  • A bottle capper
  • sanitizing agent
  • A big bucket receptacle for soaking bottles in
  • Ordinary sugar
  • Strong hands
What kind of bottles should I use for bottling?

You can use plastic or glass.

I use glass so I can recycle and feel good about saving the planet.

If you hate the planet, you can use plastic.

That said, the beauty of using plastic bottles is that if they over carbonate due to non complete fermentation or excessive priming sugar they will only split and not explode.

If you've ever seen a beer bottle explode spontaneously, you'll know what a damn mess it makes with glass everywhere!

You should also bear in mind that not all glass bottles are intended to be used for home brewing so may not be strong enough for both the fermentation process and the capping process so choose wisely - maybe even practice on the odd bottle to make sure it won't crack when you do the capping.

It's time to sterilise again

Just like you did when you prepared the beer batch, you are going to need to sterilize the beer bottles.

This is because the second round of fermentation is going to occur and again the yeast needs an opportunity do to its fermentation thing, free of microbes.

It's this secondary fermentation that puts the CO2 in your beer.

So get all your bottles in the receptacle that you are going to soak them in. I use a plastic washing basket that's big enough to hold all the bottles I need.

I then get some sodium percarbonate and add it to a cup of boiling water so it dissolves quickly.

I then add it to the basket and then get the garden hose and fill it up to the brim.

You will need to wrangle your bottles as they will try and float. Push them down with your hands and make sure they are all submerged so they all get the sanitizer in them.

They say you only need a minimum of 10 minutes to let them soak but having been burned before with a contaminate getting into my beer, I make sure there's little chance at the bottling stage. I leave them in to soak for a few hours and in direct sunlight if bottle.

As they say, sunlight is the best disinfectant.

That or run them through the dishwasher on a hot setting. That's what I do a lot of these days.

If all that seems just too difficult, you just get a bucket and fill it with your sterilizing powder.

You can then just dunk the bottles in, give them a quick swirl, drain the water back into the bucket. You can get the water out of the bottle quickly by giving it a couple of flicks of the wrist in a circular motion - the water will swirl out rather than 'bubbling out.

Whatever you do, when you're happy, drain your bottles and place them where you wish to do the bottling.

OR, you can simply do what I do is clean them properly once depleted of their delicious contents and check them in a big plastic barrel, cover with a sheet and then fill with beer when your next batch is ready for conditioning...

how to condition beer bottles


Filling the beer bottles

There are two ways you can add the sugar to your beer - you can prime the whole batch in one go by siphoning your beer into a second container and add your liquid sugar as you do so or you can add sugar to each bottle individually.

This is our preferred method as in our experience, it's less mucking around, which seems counter-intuitive but there you go.

A benefit of siphoning and then priming the batch is that there will be less sediment in your beer.

No one likes a beer gusher, so that's why I prefer batch priming as there is less chance of me screwing up, provided I do not add to much sugar!

While many beer brewers will suggest that you use a slightly heaped teaspoon of sugar for each bottle. I personally try and do a little less as some of my beers in the past have been over carbonated, due I think to too much sugar.

I like to use a small funnel to add the sugar in - it's quicker and less messy than trying to get the sugar in using just a spoon!

You are then ready to add the beer.

Simply place the bottle under the tap of your drum and you are good to go. Be wary of fast flowing beer.

Fill the bottles at a level that you would normally expect to see for commercial beer. That's about 40 mm from the top. As I understand it, that will assist with optimum secondary fermentation.

If you have a bottling wand, feel free to use it! Place it inside the tap. You'll need to be firm with it and also be aware that they can suddenly fly out with an open tap - meaning you'll lose beer.

So for that reason, I'd never wander away from the drum when there's a bottling valve in play.

It's also capping day!

When you've filled all your bottles it's now time to cap the bottles.

That process should be self-explanatory and relative to the kind of capper you have. The key thing to remember is to check that each cap has made a satisfactory seal.

If you can hear hissing from a bottle, the seal was not done correctly. Remove the cap and try again with a new cap.

I also mark all the seals with a Vivid or Sharpie so that I know what the particular batch is. This is pretty important when you have different batches and different kinds of beers on the go!

You may wish to give the successfully bottles a gentle tip or two to make sure that all the sugar is in the liquid (not stuck on the inside of the beer neck) and has a chance to dissolve.

Bottling beer can be a time consuming exercise so either make sure you can be free from interruptions or you can choose to bottle in small groups e.g. 5- 10 bottles at a time when you have a spare moment. This won't cause any problems.

The best way to store and condition bottled beer

Temperature has a massive effect on beer both in terms of brewing and conditioning.

In terms of bottle conditioning, it's best initially to store your beer in a warm place. This will encourage secondary fermentation (this is sometimes described as bottle conditioning).

The ideal temperature range is between approx 18 - 25°C for 5 to 7 days.

HOWEVER, after that period, you should leave them in a much cooler place with a temperature range between approx 8 - 12°C.

You should then leave the beer for a total minimum of three weeks since bottling date before some well-deserved consumption.

This is real, a one week old bottled beer will always taste rank, (no matter how much hops you add).

You should not easily dismiss this advice about the correct temperature for the storage of your beer. I had an experience last year when in the middle of winter I just bottled the beer and left it in the shed for about a month.

When I when to crack open the first beer, there was no fizz, just cold flat beer.

No fizz on the second or third either.

I thought I had ruined my beer somehow. 'Had fermentation actually occurred'? I wondered. Of course, it had. 

The problem was the cold. 

I brought the beers inside and left them in the living room. I waited a week for the yeast to warm up and do its secondary fermentation thing, and boom I had fizzy beer!

Winning, like Mr Sheen.

The longer you wait, the better your beer will be.

Trust me on that. 

Direct sunlight exposure can ruin homebrew


Never store your beer in direct sunlight.

The UV radiation can cause a chemical reaction to occur, making your beer taste awful or be 'skunked'

This particularly occurs for green bottled beer.

Brown bottles not so much.

Either way, you still need to keep your beers at the correct temperature and leaving them in direct sunlight will screw that up. 

How to use and replace an Italian Bottling Spigot

Thursday, September 13, 2018
When I first started brewing beer my mate said to me:

"yeah brewing's good and all but bottling is a real bitch".

I realized they weren't wrong when I once didn't notice the bottling wand had fallen out of the fermenter tap on bottling day and my brew was piling in a nice pool on the shed floor.

Anyways, a bottling spigot is a handy little device that can help make that bottling chore just a little bit easier.

So what is a bottling spigot and why are they often referred to as Italian?


The 1/2 half inch spigot tap is used to transfer the precious beer or wine into the bottles. It's a handy valve to control the rate of transfer and it's easy to turn on and off.

They look like this:

italian spigot for bottling

These spigots are commonly made in Italy from food-safe plastic but the truth is they are most likely manufactured in China. If you a serious about your plastic safety, look for a brand that has been FDA approved.

Note the tapered ending. This is so you can add a bottling wand or plastic tube for pouring (typically good for 5/16" and 3/8" size hose). This is handy if you will be running the brew threw an inline filter.

Here's a handy video guide on how to install the spigot


Taps can break fairly easily but lucky for brewers everywhere, spigots are cheap and easy to replace and install. 



There are some handy hints in the video that are worth mentioning:
  • Screw the unit in carefully. 
  • Remember to attach the gasket from the inside of the fermenter
  • Do a test with water to ensure the spigot is sealed properly
If your fermenter bucket doesn't have a hole for the spigot, you'll need to cleanly drill a hole that is 1" in size (25.4mm). This kit actually comes with a drill bit that you can use to drill the hole to the exact size.

Given the spigot is easily removable by unscrewing the gasket, they can be removed and cleaned quite easily. This is a good idea if you are keen on preventing beer infections and the like.

You can, of course, use spigots for any kind of beverage dispenser or 5-gallon bucket.

Check out what's available on Amazon.
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About the author Jimmy Jangles


My name is
Jimmy Jangles, the founder of The Astromech. I have always been fascinated by the world of science fiction, especially the Star Wars universe, and I created this website to share my love for it with fellow fans.

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