MercenaryForHire
Lifer
- Jan 31, 2002
- 40,819
- 2
- 0
Originally posted by: Jfrag
Very interesting thread. I think that when I get done building my house I may try this out.
w0rd. I'm gonna look into this. I love rootbeer.
- M4H
Originally posted by: Jfrag
Very interesting thread. I think that when I get done building my house I may try this out.
Originally posted by: MercenaryForHire
Originally posted by: Jfrag
Very interesting thread. I think that when I get done building my house I may try this out.
w0rd. I'm gonna look into this. I love rootbeer.
- M4H
Originally posted by: Jzero
Originally posted by: MercenaryForHire
Originally posted by: Jfrag
Very interesting thread. I think that when I get done building my house I may try this out.
w0rd. I'm gonna look into this. I love rootbeer.
- M4H
You may yet be able to get the Mr. Rootbeer kit for $5 at Target. Easy way to get your feet wet
Originally posted by: MaxDepth
Found it. It is the Zatarain's Root Beer Extract
Originally posted by: Jzero
Originally posted by: mgravy
Just wondering...
With a home rootbeer kegging system and CO2, is refrigeration a required part of the process? Could you simply brew it in the keg and then pour it over ice?
Excellent question. Because I don't know the answer.
In reading the tap-a-draft documentation, it seems to suggest that the bottles should be kept refrigerated, but it might be different for different kegging systems.
Although I imagine it is good to keep them cold to prevent the gas from expanding. I think they carbonate better when cold, too, and the cold also stops the yeast from fermenting when it comes to making root beer, although with the kegging system you can do away
Originally posted by: mgravy
Just wondering...
With a home rootbeer kegging system and CO2, is refrigeration a required part of the process? Could you simply brew it in the keg and then pour it over ice?
Originally posted by: Rias
I bought some Sprechers root beer concentrate from northern brewer so my wife could have root beer on draft. It's sitting in it's own fridge with it's own tap in the basement. Mmmm!
Originally posted by: Jzero
Originally posted by: Rias
I bought some Sprechers root beer concentrate from northern brewer so my wife could have root beer on draft. It's sitting in it's own fridge with it's own tap in the basement. Mmmm!
NIce! Do you use yeast at all, or do you just force-carbonate it completely?
Originally posted by: Jzero
Originally posted by: Rias
I bought some Sprechers root beer concentrate from northern brewer so my wife could have root beer on draft. It's sitting in it's own fridge with it's own tap in the basement. Mmmm!
NIce! Do you use yeast at all, or do you just force-carbonate it completely?
Originally posted by: Rias
Originally posted by: Jzero
Originally posted by: Rias
I bought some Sprechers root beer concentrate from northern brewer so my wife could have root beer on draft. It's sitting in it's own fridge with it's own tap in the basement. Mmmm!
NIce! Do you use yeast at all, or do you just force-carbonate it completely?
Sprecher has preservatives in it, so it must be force-carbonated. It too is really sweet, but when you get the right carbonation leve it really balances it out I think. Problem is leaving the pressure at where it needs to be when you have to dispense at a lower psi. (That means I get to serve her root beer whenever she wants). The sprecher stuff comes ready to mix with water (1 gallon jug) and I paid $17. I've heard this is supposed to be superior to the gnome extracts.
Originally posted by: Rias
Originally posted by: Jzero
Originally posted by: Rias
I bought some Sprechers root beer concentrate from northern brewer so my wife could have root beer on draft. It's sitting in it's own fridge with it's own tap in the basement. Mmmm!
NIce! Do you use yeast at all, or do you just force-carbonate it completely?
Sprecher has preservatives in it, so it must be force-carbonated. It too is really sweet, but when you get the right carbonation leve it really balances it out I think. Problem is leaving the pressure at where it needs to be when you have to dispense at a lower psi. (That means I get to serve her root beer whenever she wants). The sprecher stuff comes ready to mix with water (1 gallon jug) and I paid $17. I've heard this is supposed to be superior to the gnome extracts.
Originally posted by: Jzero
Originally posted by: Rias
Originally posted by: Jzero
Originally posted by: Rias
I bought some Sprechers root beer concentrate from northern brewer so my wife could have root beer on draft. It's sitting in it's own fridge with it's own tap in the basement. Mmmm!
NIce! Do you use yeast at all, or do you just force-carbonate it completely?
Sprecher has preservatives in it, so it must be force-carbonated. It too is really sweet, but when you get the right carbonation leve it really balances it out I think. Problem is leaving the pressure at where it needs to be when you have to dispense at a lower psi. (That means I get to serve her root beer whenever she wants). The sprecher stuff comes ready to mix with water (1 gallon jug) and I paid $17. I've heard this is supposed to be superior to the gnome extracts.
Thanks for this information!
What do you mean by gnome extracts? Those are the cheapie ones you find in stores?
How much does the Sprecher's extract mix down to?
I only have a 5' picnic tap for the root beer right now and that means it's coming out at 20psi when the root beer is kept at 30 psi.
Originally posted by: HomeBrewerDude
now when you guys are going to make some beer?
tis a great hobby... hosting poker tomorrow night and the homebrew is on me!
HBD (the brewer formerly known as yamahaxs)
Originally posted by: Jzero
Originally posted by: HomeBrewerDude
now when you guys are going to make some beer?
tis a great hobby... hosting poker tomorrow night and the homebrew is on me!
HBD (the brewer formerly known as yamahaxs)
I just made an offer on a house. Once I'm out of my shoebox studio, and I'll have a kitchen and a basement......then cometh the beer!