Bottling Day – Fale All

Sunday, October 7, 2018


Not sure why I took so many pictures…

I washed up and sanitized all of my bottles and bottling accessories.

Along with cleaning up the kitchen, the whole process ends up taking hours. I’ve always got some music or a podcast going. This bottling day was accompanied by Master of Puppets.

No, YOU have rubber ducks on your records.

The fermenter bucket smelled so heavily of cloves that I’m worried the beer is going to be undrinkable.

I had ordered a 7 inch hop bag with the Oatmeal Stout recipe with intention of using it like a sock on the end of the racking cane. Unfortunately, it turned out to be a loose weave material like the grain bag they ship with these recipe kits. I was expecting a nylon bag.

I wrapped the hop bag in a couple of layers around the business end of the racking cane and started siphoning into the bottling bucket. I soon found it was heavily aerating the beer, which you don’t want to do at this stage. It looked like one of those chaser led light tubes, so I removed it after a little while.

Final Gravity: 1.006 (I mentioned previously that either I didn’t know how to read the hydrometer or it was defective)

Here are some pictures of bottles…

These are a mix of the 25oz barbecue sauce flip-top bottles I ordered from Adventures in Homebrewing at the same time I ordered my brewing kit, and some 16.9, 12, and one 11.2oz bottle I label-peeled.

After moving into this house and realizing things like pots and pans didn’t fit in the kitchen cabinets, I bought and assembled a four door flat pack cabinet. After I started homebrewing, the pots and pans were eventually overtaken by bottles and brewing equipment.








All site content © Copyright 2024 James Moats unless otherwise noted.