Bad Kegs???
Bad Kegs???
OK, so kegging now for a little over a year and my keg beer is starting to taste really bad...almost metallic like. Recent beers included a Scottish 60/- and double decocted Munich dunkel. The dunkel has only been in the keg for around a month and the scottish less than 2 weeks. They both tasted good from secondary to keg and bad after carbonating. The inside of the now empty scottish keg looks almost copper in color. That was after a 30 minute soak with PBW and rinse. What gives??? Are my kegs going bad or something??
John Eikenberry
I haven't ever tried BKF so I'm not sure about using it inside. Is there anything on the label about food safe or rinsing?
Five Star makes a caustic. I don't see it at the homebrew shops. It might not be avaliable to consumers. I'll have to look around to see if there's anything comparable to use. I wouldn't mind doing my kettles.
Five Star makes a caustic. I don't see it at the homebrew shops. It might not be avaliable to consumers. I'll have to look around to see if there's anything comparable to use. I wouldn't mind doing my kettles.
Runamok Brewing
Jesus must have been a yeast. Who else could turn water into wine?
Jesus must have been a yeast. Who else could turn water into wine?
BKF is safe to use on the inside. I've used it extensively whenever I get a rust spot and need to "reset" the stainless. It does a great job of cutting through everything I've encountered. Once you scrub it with BKF, just give it a quick rinse and the passive oxide layer that makes it "stainless" (chromium oxide?) should form instantly.
By the way, have you looked at the interior of your kegs under different lighting conditions? I've noticed the light source can drastically change the perceived color of polished stainless.
By the way, have you looked at the interior of your kegs under different lighting conditions? I've noticed the light source can drastically change the perceived color of polished stainless.
Update. Just did a 24 hour soak with starsan followed by a scrub (good thing my arms are skinny!) Inside of kegs looks much better. Guess I'll put a better effort into keeping the kegs cleaner. Also going to start spraying the gas posts with starsan prior to carbonation. Thanks for all the help!
John Eikenberry
Update. Just did a 24 hour soak with starsan followed by a scrub (good thing my arms are skinny!) Inside of kegs looks much better. Guess I'll put a better effort into keeping the kegs cleaner. Also going to start spraying the gas posts with starsan prior to carbonation. Thanks for all the help!
John Eikenberry
- bkanderson
- Posts: 336
- Joined: Wed Feb 01, 2006 9:29 am
- Location: Robins, IA
The only other thing that might cause off flavors or metallic taste is if the pressure relief valve on your keg was replaced with a steel chrome plated key ring. If you use star san, it will eat that ring and produce off-flavors. Not sure if that’s the case, but thought I would through it out there.
Brian Anderson
Bad Kegs???
Interesting. Does the beer normally touch the relief valve? Or is the little bit that might slosh on it enough to flavor a batch?
On Wed, Dec 1, 2010 at 12:53 PM, bkanderson <brew-tech@crbeernuts.org (brew-tech@crbeernuts.org)> wrote:
On Wed, Dec 1, 2010 at 12:53 PM, bkanderson <brew-tech@crbeernuts.org (brew-tech@crbeernuts.org)> wrote:
Post generated using Mail2Forum (http://www.mail2forum.com)The only other thing that might cause off flavors or metallic taste is if the pressure relief valve on your keg was replaced with a steel chrome plated key ring. If you use star san, it will eat that ring and produce off-flavors. Not sure if that’s the case, but thought I would through it out there.
- bkanderson
- Posts: 336
- Joined: Wed Feb 01, 2006 9:29 am
- Location: Robins, IA
I would guess it depends on how you carbonate your beer. I do the shake method so it comes in contact with the relief valve a lot. If you just put 10-15 PSI on and let it sit, I doubt it would be a problem. Might be during sanitization, like if you you shake the keg and the residue drips down and sticks to the sides when you pour out the sanitizer. These are all just hypothetical situations. I know I had a problem with the relief value, it was mostly corroded away and once I changed it out, no more off flavors. I have no clue if that was the true issue or not.
Brian Anderson
Bad Kegs???
Makes sense. I didn't think about shaking during force-carb, which I do too when I'm impatient.
On Wed, Dec 1, 2010 at 1:11 PM, bkanderson <brew-tech@crbeernuts.org (brew-tech@crbeernuts.org)> wrote:
On Wed, Dec 1, 2010 at 1:11 PM, bkanderson <brew-tech@crbeernuts.org (brew-tech@crbeernuts.org)> wrote:
Post generated using Mail2Forum (http://www.mail2forum.com)I would guess it depends on how you carbonate your beer. I do the shake method so it comes in contact with the relief valve a lot. If you just put 10-15 PSI on and let it sit, I doubt it would be a problem. Might be during sanitization, like if you you shake the keg and the residue drips down and sticks to the sides when you pour out the sanitizer. These are all just hypothetical situations. I know I had a problem with the relief value, it was mostly corroded away and once I changed it out, no more off flavors. I have no clue if that was the true issue or not.