Filtering Steps
Filtering Steps
After a discussion on Facebook, someone asked I share my filtering steps on the forum. These are steps I've developed through a combination of chatting with Tasty McDole about his process and through personal trial & error.
Procedure for Plate-Style Beer Filter
1. Fill receiving kegs with water & empty with CO2 (or just purge the keg with CO2).
2. Sanitize all filter surfaces.
3. Thoroughly rinse filter pads with warm water.
4. Assemble filter.
5. Hook up filter to empty receiving keg & flush all lines with CO2.
6. Pour off pint of source keg sludge.
7. Hook up to source keg only & push beer through filter until water and sanitizer are gone. (Press on ball lock adapter center pin to let beer flow.)
8. Wait 10 minutes.
9. Dump ~1 pint of beer (until papery/soapy filter pad aroma is gone).
10. Attach to receiving keg & proceed as usual, keeping the exit point on the filter plates pointing upwards.
Procedure for Plate-Style Beer Filter
1. Fill receiving kegs with water & empty with CO2 (or just purge the keg with CO2).
2. Sanitize all filter surfaces.
3. Thoroughly rinse filter pads with warm water.
4. Assemble filter.
5. Hook up filter to empty receiving keg & flush all lines with CO2.
6. Pour off pint of source keg sludge.
7. Hook up to source keg only & push beer through filter until water and sanitizer are gone. (Press on ball lock adapter center pin to let beer flow.)
8. Wait 10 minutes.
9. Dump ~1 pint of beer (until papery/soapy filter pad aroma is gone).
10. Attach to receiving keg & proceed as usual, keeping the exit point on the filter plates pointing upwards.
Re: Filtering Steps
Thank you sir!
Cedar Rapids Beer Nuts Secretary
"Milk does a body good my ass. Beer is the healthier choice and hops are a wonderful medicine."
MattF
"Milk does a body good my ass. Beer is the healthier choice and hops are a wonderful medicine."
MattF
Re: Filtering Steps
I have recently come to realize my filtering steps list needs one more, very crucial entry.
0. Only use filter pads from Williams Brewing. (All other filter pads may leave a floral, dryer-sheet flavor and aroma in your beer, immediately ruining it.)
0. Only use filter pads from Williams Brewing. (All other filter pads may leave a floral, dryer-sheet flavor and aroma in your beer, immediately ruining it.)
Re: Filtering Steps
I take it that it didn't fade as you hoped ?
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Sent from my Nexus 5X using Tapatalk
Randy Carris
Randy All the Time Brewing
Randy All the Time Brewing
Re: Filtering Steps
Nope. It actually seems worse. To their credit Adventures In Homebrewing has agreed to pay to have me ship them some bottles so they can see for themselves.
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Re: Filtering Steps
The name alone should have been the first clue. Adventures in Homebrewing. Would you buy protein from Adventures in Meat?
- andrewmaixner
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Re: Filtering Steps
I've gotten a fair amount of equipment from AiH , and it's been fine on price and quality -- be interested to hear how the filters issue resolves though
Re: Filtering Steps
I'll keep you all posted. They claim they've sold thousands of these filter pads and I'm the first complaint they've had.
Re: Filtering Steps
That's what you get for buying the Bounce-brand filters.
Have you heard anything back from them?
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Have you heard anything back from them?
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Re: Filtering Steps
I'm going to mail them bottles of the pre- & post-filtered beers.
- andrewmaixner
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Re: Filtering Steps
if it isn't too much hassle, you could also mail them a "filtered with competitor's filter" bottle for reference, to eliminate all but 1 variable.DrPaulsen wrote:I'm going to mail them bottles of the pre- & post-filtered beers.
Re: Filtering Steps
I would if I had anything to filter.
- andrewmaixner
- Posts: 691
- Joined: Mon Jul 14, 2014 10:26 am
Re: Filtering Steps
Any resolution to this?
I remembered your thread about filtering after I used a tea ball with way-too-wide mesh to dry hop a keg (will go back to fine nylon mesh bags in the future). Now I have 2/3 oz of hop detritus in a keg of beer and am considering getting or borrowing a filter.
I remembered your thread about filtering after I used a tea ball with way-too-wide mesh to dry hop a keg (will go back to fine nylon mesh bags in the future). Now I have 2/3 oz of hop detritus in a keg of beer and am considering getting or borrowing a filter.
Re: Filtering Steps
After going back and forth for about six months, the guy from AIH eventually quit and moved on before he ever got around to tasting the beers. His replacement sent me a note apologizing for their lack of response and gave me a gift card covering the cost of the filters, the bottle shipping fees, and an extra $10 for my trouble (apparently that's the value of a batch of homebrew). He tasted the beer but said he couldn't taste the dryer sheet flavor. I appreciate the gesture of a gift card refund, but will not be buying filters from them again. At this point, the only brand I have had good luck with is sold by Williams Brewing. I re-brewed the Helles and filtered it with new filter pads. This batch does not taste like dryer sheets. The off flavor in the original keg was still there six months later so I just dumped it.