Interesting

Today I managed to rack the beer from the primary fermenter to the secondary fermenter. That is technical beer jargon for siphoning the beer out of the nasty, crusty, jug that exploded…. into a nice, clean bottle so it can finish fermenting and clarifying without sitting around in all that crud.

Here is the beer all settled down for a week in its new home.

SecondarySounds simple, huh? Unfortunately, getting there was a lot more interesting than I thought it would be. I didn’t get any photos of the “interesting” parts of the process because it was more “interesting” than I thought it would be, and that kept me too busy to take pictures.

First of all, getting the siphon to start took a few tries sucking on the hose until I was covered in beer (at least the beer wasn’t sour like last time). For some reason that is always more interesting than it should be. I wasn’t drinking any beer… really…. honest…. I was starting the siphon.

Then, at some point after I got the siphon working, the siphon hose popped out of the carboy and started siphoning the beer onto the kitchen floor.

Even though I popped the hose right back into the bottle, by the time that was done we had initiated the kitchen floor with a pint or so of raw beer.

It was interesting trying to clean up the spill so we would not track it through the house while still managing to keep the siphon going and keeping the hose confined to the bottle for the duration.

We did get the beer transferred with some minor losses.

Here is a photo of the bottom of the shoe that is still sticking to the floor in the kitchen.

ShoeWe will have to address that issue with another mopping at some point.

After that I was faced with cleaning out the muck from the other carboy.

It was a daunting task because it took a half hour with a scrub brush just to get that junk out of Dad’s Beer Bucket, and there is no way to get a scrub brush into the carboy. Scroll down a couple of days in this blog and you can see what was in Dad’s Beer Bucket. Yuk.

No scrub brushes can go into the plastic carboy because they will scratch it, so I used this instead.

Carboy CleanerThat is a Carboy Cleaner. The electric drill is used to spin it around inside of the carboy, and when it is spinning, the blue pads on the left side spin apart and scrub down the sides of the bottle. According to the salesman (what could possibly go wrong with that?) the blue pads are guaranteed not to scratch the plastic carboy.

The stopper that came with the Carboy Cleaner is too small for the neck on the plastic carboy, so I had to cobble together a larger stopper for it.

PlugI drilled a hole in the big plug and stuffed the little plug into the hole in the big plug and then I stuffed the big plug with the little plug stuffed into it into the carboy neck and then I held the whole thing together with Tenacity while I spun up the Carboy Cleaner. Hey. It worked.

So after soaking the inside of the carboy with a solution of B-BriteĀ® and water, I spun up the Carboy Cleaner, and the beer snot crud came off. Here is the top of the carboy where all the beer snot was stuck.

CleanNot bad! Looks nice. After my interesting morning with the beer stuff, at least the cleaning equipment worked.

Next week we will put the beer into the bottles.

Let’s hope that it is a boring adventure next time.

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