That is the question most home brewers eventually ask soon after getting
hooked on brewing their own beer. Most home brew enthusiasts see it
as a natural progression from novice to expert, much like going from
extract to all-grain. However, even with all the positives of kegging
your home made beer there are a few things you need to understand. First
off, and probably the most important for many is the cost of kegging
equipment.
For some it might be a hard sell to the wife or significant other on
the merits of spending a few hundred to upwards of six hundred dollars
on C02 tanks, canisters, towers, and maybe even a kegerator. Wasn’t
one of the reasons given for the need to brew your own beer the money
that would be saved? For those lucky few whom money is not an issue
or those, like me, with a wife that loves beer, you will have to consider
the space needed for a keg system.
Not only will you have to have space to store everything required you
will have to have a place to dispense from. If you also appreciate food
in addition to appreciating beer this usually means that you will need
a spare refrigerator or even better—a kegerator, an appliance whose
sole purpose and function is to serve beer. Can there be a higher calling
for an appliance? I think not.
Kegging does free the homebrewer from the mundane and tedious tasks
of cleaning and sanitizing bottles, storing the empties (always seems
there are more empties than fullies), and waiting weeks for beer to
carbonate in the bottle. It also gives you control by easily adjusting
carbonation levels to your liking for a given style or batch. A kegging
system also opens the door to other possibilities, like closed beer
transfer for sanitation and filtering for crystal clear beer.
Even with all the cleaning, and all the liberating freedoms of kegging
your beer, bottling your homemade beer still has its place. For instance,
seasonal or specialty beers that you don’t want to drink everyday would
do better in a bottle. Especially, when you are giving some away for
gifts or to take to a small get-together where a keg would be inappropriate.
Bottles also let you add a custom label that personifies your beer or
adds that personal touch and flare to the beer.
If you have the cash and space you can easily relieve yourself of the
tedium of priming and bottling and enjoy the convenience and flexibility
of a complete kegging setup. However, bottles will always have their
place in the grand scheme of homebrewing.
Gregory McLaw is a regular contributor to
www.makebeerathome.info
and enjoys brewing and drinking his own beer.
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