Hello,
I just received a yeast keg brick (not sure if I'm telling it right)
Use for this tank is to store the yeast for reuse.
Im wondering if some mistake happen or not because is not like what i was waiting to receive.
Not have bottom valve.
Any help if i can use it,or if not what is the use for this
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that is not like any of the yeast brinks that i have ever used. The brinks that we had were cut and welded 15.5gal(1/2 bbl) kegs with a 4 inch tc on top and port on the bottom side wall. would have been nice if they had legs/wheels and a valve out the bottom middle, but that was not what we had.
at our scale, we had 4-5 yeast brinks, atleast 3 full at all times, rolling 2 brewing shifts a day 4-5 days a week. we had super strict cleaning requirements for the brinks an then to top it off we also burned them at 180 for a minimum of 30 mins before we purged and filled them.
my only guess is that maybe you flip it over to pull the yeast out.
i am not really sure what the tiny carb stone looking thing in the enclosure is for? maybe you can flip it over and use it to carb a small amount of beer???
i like the hose grip situation you have going on there looks comfy lol.
i am guessing that is a blow off/PRVR setup in the middle?
that closure system looks sketchy for pressure work.
Soap box about repitching yeast vs using fresh yeast:
Repitching is certainly do able, but requires a fair amount of timing, cleanliness, and knowledge to get it right consistently. When you are making a living at it, you really dont want to roll the dice with bad ferments or infections.
I have been doing this for years and have a small-ish system with lots of different yeast in house and I happily dont repitch yeast. the beers/fermentation time/attenuation/etc are all very very consistent.
if you are intent on doing this, you need to really dig into reading about yeast management and invest in some lab equipment and understand the time required todo the labwork before you pitch. You dont need a lot of gear, but you will need a good microscope/slides/pipets/whatever the hell the yeast count grid slide thing is and the time todo it.
not being negative, you can do it, but on a small setup with limited gear/space/time it probably isnt worth the effort. Also know that once you pull yeast you basically have to be brewing within a window or your viability will be gone and you will be buying more yeast anyway. Your yeast will dictate your schedule especially while you are getting up and running this may be a challenge.
since you are brewing lagers? you can front load your tanks and basically brew as fast as possible. for a min and then lager all of the beer and keep it cold in the tanks until you sell it. While doing that, i would not use the brink, i instead would cone to cone transfer the yeast using your clean and sanitized product lines. it is hard to know your volumes when doing this as yeast is not a consistent...consistency and the flow will vary somewhat based on how thick the yeast is.