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Sweet Hard Apple Cider! - How to Bottle Pasteurize & Keg your Hard Cider!

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  • Опубликовано: 4 фев 2023
  • Use code VVKIT5OFF for 5% to get a VEVOR 5L MINI KEG: s.vevor.com/bfP4Ou
    VEVOR 4.8 Gallon Fruit Press - s.vevor.com/bfP4Oh
    VEVOR 8 Gallon Still - s.vevor.com/bfP4OF
    In this video I show you how to pasteurize your bottles of Sweet Hard Apple Cider using a sous vide cooker for long term storage, and how to use a #Vevor 5L Mini Keg for your hard cider.
    Sous Vide cooker - amzn.to/3IQME6d
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    Intro music - “Yes Ma’am” by Cullah is licensed under an Attribution-ShareAlike License. Check him out. He's Awesome! / @cullah

Комментарии • 118

  • @BeardedBored
    @BeardedBored  Год назад +5

    Use code VVKIT5OFF for 5% to get a VEVOR 5L MINI KEG: s.vevor.com/bfP4Ou

    • @dbomber69
      @dbomber69 Год назад +3

      Was wondering when you were gonna follow my suggestion and get a soux vide machine for your cider. That was 2 years ago. You were having bottles blow up on you. Gotta be saving a lot of cider with it. Have you tried a mead/cider recipe? Or tried shine from popped popcorn yet?
      🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺

    • @GO0DWOLF
      @GO0DWOLF Год назад

      @@dbomber69 I *think* I mentioned that as well somewhere, but got a lot of poo pooing about how the slow temp rise would throw off flavor. Glad to see it works.

  • @stevesalisbury8206
    @stevesalisbury8206 3 месяца назад +2

    I have the same set up. I added a stabilizer potassium sorbate 1/2 teaspoon. The next day I
    Transferred to bottling bucket and added a whole can of concentrate and transferred to keg and carbonated. Turned out perfect.

  • @CitySteadingBrews
    @CitySteadingBrews Год назад +4

    Great video my friend! We're looking into this for the exact reasons you did!

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +1

      It's pretty spiffy. Get extra CO2. I wasted 2 by not screwing them in fast enough and didn't have enough pressure to serve out the last half of the keg.

  • @HisVirusness
    @HisVirusness Год назад +6

    I've been using the plastic bottle trick ever since I first saw your original cider video years ago. It's come insanely handy whenever I've been bottle carbonating (mostly homemade root beer).

  • @1kreature
    @1kreature 11 месяцев назад +1

    Tip: Place your bottles in the water in such a way as to create a channel from the recirculation ports on the sou vide water heater can circulate along them. Stacking the bottles in a tight grid in opposite end of tank makes it very hard for the water to reach all the bottles at the same rate. Usually the recirculation is up/down or down/up so you can create "rows" of bottles with channels in-between pointing at the heater.

  • @thesoberstill
    @thesoberstill Год назад +2

    Bro your videos are pretty much magic. I have currently pieced together a still off of amazon and i'm going to start a RUclips channel. I truly need a hobby other than the garbage I'm concentrating on now. You are the first guy I ever watched doing this and will always be awesome in my book. Thanks for being so funny, informative and awesome. keep up the good work bro.

  • @everydayden5826
    @everydayden5826 Год назад +4

    Hey Buddy, thanks for the recognition ! Another thing I failed to mention to you in my email is that you can always keep a large amount of your cider "dry" in a carboy without pasteurizing it. If you are having friends over in the next day or two, go ahead and pour off a gallon or so into the mini keg, and back sweeten all you want. You won't have to worry about over carbonation being a problem in the keg, and as long as you drink it within a few days, your cider will still be sweet as the yeast will not have had time to chew through the added sweetener. When I have a few extra pennies, I'm going to buy a 5 gal corny keg, gas regulator and CO2 cylinder, because we both know that 5 gallons of cider won't last long with long hot summer days and thirsty friends, ha ha. Frankly it's just as easy to do a five gallon batch as it is a smaller one. Two last things, 1 gallon of cider, 1 can of apple juice concentrate, and one of those bottles of tart cherry juice ( 20 oz maybe, I'm not sure ) almost fills the 169 oz keg perfectly, and is just like your tart cherry cider that you made before. Absolutely delicious !!!!!
    Also, ABV in anything is very much personal preference, especially for those of us into making our own beer, wine, cider, etc. as you already know. I tend to shoot for between 1080 and 1090 to offset the addition of the back sweetener and any juices I use for additional flavoring(s). That way, after downing a couple of them you know that you are drinking cider and not just apple juice.
    Be well Brother and chat soon. PS. I'll update you in a couple of days on that orange marmalade fermentation I mentioned to you.
    ----- den

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +3

      Nice! This another gem of wisdom. Thanks!!!

    • @astrobob9432
      @astrobob9432 Год назад +2

      Yep, I don't bother with pasteurizing in my keg. It's always gone long before any possible over pressure. I gotta get another batch going!

  • @SA12String
    @SA12String Год назад +2

    So educational. Thank you. LOL. As I scrolled down to type that, you opened that bottle and I about jumped out of my skin. :)

  • @GO0DWOLF
    @GO0DWOLF Год назад +4

    According to Kegland, Coca Cola bottles at 40 psi, which is a bit higher than most, but it's what gives it, as they say, that "TV static" feeling on your tongue the first few sips. If anybody is running a CO2 set up, that's a good baseline to start from.

  • @KernsJW
    @KernsJW Год назад +4

    Nice overview. Try a brown sugar version. Its become my biggest hit. Second up is the stuff aged on apple wood and cinnamon, then regular sugar.
    Retrofit the keg to take sodastream and competitor cannisters or a small tank which is cheaper but takes up room. Its a lot cheaper in the long run and you can be some what confident in whats in the co2. Those small ones on Amazon are not always trustworthy which I feel you missed for a con on the keg.
    Also for the pop tops, I've found you can tweak the bend to lighten the holding force and at a certain point it leaks past the silicone seal and can even make a little noise. It takes very little of a change, still holds very well, and saved me from a couple busted bottles. I also found these carafe style ones that don't hold tight enough, so a bit of a modification on those and they do well too. I pasteurize with the sous vide as well, i do swirl the bottles a couple times during the 25 minutes to try to make sure nothing holds on up top. I have also come to the opinion that's how yeast have survived. I'm still a bit wondering if certain yeast are more tolerant to heat like 71b and some others that like higher heat.

  • @DustyPlunkett-sg4kn
    @DustyPlunkett-sg4kn 9 месяцев назад

    Outstanding video,very informative and easy to follow thank you.

  • @MaestroPdx
    @MaestroPdx Год назад +2

    Nice update. I found your channel a long time ago with that original cider video. Cheers.

  • @devinodonnell
    @devinodonnell Год назад

    It looks like that cider turned out *really* nicely there!

  • @thethirstybookworm
    @thethirstybookworm Год назад +2

    That's a sweet little set up, my 5 gallon keg is too much for as little as I drink. Plus the little co2 bottles are surely more convenient. Thanks!

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +2

      Yeah, I end up making way more than I can drink, so even if I upgrade to a bigger set up, it'll probably just be for the rare gathering. So far, this size suits me just right;-)

  • @lakemarkel7384
    @lakemarkel7384 6 месяцев назад

    Great video

  • @OzarkStillWorks
    @OzarkStillWorks Год назад +2

    Awesome information!

  • @BEAVERDIY
    @BEAVERDIY Год назад +2

    I recently got a sous vide have to accidentally make it move to the distillery.
    Those kegs look awesome...

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад

      Funny thing is I haven't even tried cooking with my sous vide yet, hahaha!

    • @BEAVERDIY
      @BEAVERDIY Год назад +1

      @@BeardedBored I use mine a ton made some Steaks ,Ribs and tons of other goodies love it.

  • @paulsapper
    @paulsapper Год назад

    Yeah man I am at the same stage, I’ve had a few bottles explode during pasteurisation and not willing to take the risk.
    I’m going the keg setup as well.
    Great video mate

  • @AlbeeSoaring
    @AlbeeSoaring Год назад +2

    I like the sous-vide idea for pasteurizing bottles. Ill have to try this next time. For kegging I just took my cider and put in a sanitized pot brought to 160* and let it sit there for 10 minutes. Then I coooled and put in the keg. I put some in a plastic bottle to test and make sure it didnt carbonate after. worked perfectly.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +2

      Really, it didn't get an oxidized flavor from being in a kettle?

    • @AlbeeSoaring
      @AlbeeSoaring Год назад +1

      @@BeardedBored no. It tasted amazing and was super clear.

  • @the_whiskeyshaman
    @the_whiskeyshaman Год назад +2

    Hell yea love it. I got one of those little kegs works great.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +1

      It's my favorite new toy. Beer next!

  • @TigerPat_9180
    @TigerPat_9180 Год назад +2

    Really Enjoyed Your Video , Thanks ! 🐯🤠

  • @stefanleijon9637
    @stefanleijon9637 Год назад +3

    Man that looks so freakin delicious!
    Last years apple harvest became apple brandy, this year I´m definately making hard cider and getting a keg :)

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +1

      It's always a good idea to split the batch and do half for cider and half for brandy;-)

  • @Ansis99
    @Ansis99 Год назад +2

    Thanks!

  • @kristoffer-robinlotze7273
    @kristoffer-robinlotze7273 Год назад +2

    I tried pasteurisation a few years ago. Preheated in two stages but 4 out of 7 bottles exploded.
    So now I'm just putting the cider in the fridge... the ones that hypothetically doesn't freeze. 😜

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +2

      Yeah, it can be a real pain. I'm thinking most of the time I'm just going to keg it. So much faster and easier.

  • @MadJix
    @MadJix Год назад +2

    I use 5 gallon kegs and a tank of co2. I keep them between 12-17 psi. They stay in the fridge. But if I want to fast carbonate them I crank the co2 to 30 psi and shake them for about 2 minutes before going into the fridge.

  • @tylerstout1549
    @tylerstout1549 Год назад +2

    FYI Grolsch bottles are designed so that the swing top gives before the bottle blows, so when all is said and done, it was for the better that your swing top flew off.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +1

      True. I'm just glad I wasn't looking down the barrel, haha:-)

  • @sandys.1891
    @sandys.1891 Год назад

    I'm all set except now I'm waiting for my mini keg to arrive. I think that's the safest route for me. First time brewing. I'm planning to use Martinelli's apple juice because I really like the taste of that brand. I'm going to reduce more Martinelli's to use as the sweetener.

  • @SyBernot
    @SyBernot Год назад +2

    Tell Santa what you want for Christmas.
    I want a Red Rider Apple Cider in a flip top bottle
    Kid, You'll put your eye out!

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +1

      No kidding! I'm too Frag-IL-E to mess around with that stuff;-)

    • @SyBernot
      @SyBernot Год назад

      @@BeardedBored Oh, it's Italian cider!

  • @granthampubunderground
    @granthampubunderground Год назад +3

    Cool video. Here's my question: if you chemicaly stabilize your cider before kegging, why would you need to pasturize the keg?

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +1

      You don't as long as you use the right chemicals. I only had potassium metabisulfate, which can work, but if the yeast population is high and healthy you may still get some yeast activity, so it's best to add potassium sorbate as well. I didn't have any of that, so I figured I'd try to pasteurize the whole thing. Of course chemical stabilization is the only way to go for bigger kegs.

  • @allenshiflett
    @allenshiflett Год назад +1

    Great vid as usual😀 Could that keg be converted so the liquor fairy could use it?

  • @101JRA
    @101JRA Год назад +2

    Mixed drinks on tap!

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +1

      Indeed! I saw a video where they carbed whiskey. How about a carbed whiskey sour?

  • @scottclay4253
    @scottclay4253 Год назад +2

    Is your cider recipe labeled “Shotgun Red”, that cap coming off was a surprise to say the least. Thanks Bearded, great stuff. Stay well, Brother.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +2

      I like that name! Seems very fitting:-)

  • @troyleach5471
    @troyleach5471 Год назад +1

    You are a fantastic brewer dude, I am not a cider or hard seltzer guy but I imagine you could use the mini keg for beer? although pretty small

  • @pacman10182
    @pacman10182 Год назад +2

    I've got the same keg. the brass stem to the regulator broke, so I turned a hose barb to fit a standard co2 hose
    I got lucky finding a good co2 canister at a thrift store, didn't have to pay for a new tank

  • @ed.williams
    @ed.williams Год назад +2

    Who is this bearded man that I follow on RUclips, and why does he have a picture of me on his T-shirt? 😉

  • @skepticfucker280
    @skepticfucker280 Год назад +1

    Have you seen homemade "pine soda"?
    Besides the dangers of fermentation in sealed bottles, think the liquor fairy might have some ideas on the posibilities of treating it like a mash?
    I'm guessing low yield but might be fun.
    :)
    Cheers

  • @kevin_ninja_jones2363
    @kevin_ninja_jones2363 Год назад +2

    Have you ever used no2 it's the ones they use in those whipped cream containers co2 has a bitter flavor and no2 has a sweeter flavor

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +1

      I'll have to give that a try. I'm pretty sure I saw threaded NO2 cartridges on amazon, so they should work in this.

    • @everydayden5826
      @everydayden5826 Год назад +1

      @@BeardedBored They do have threaded NO2 cartridges, but I believe you will need a different regulator. You can do nitro coffees, beers, etc if you have that set up. Might be nice to have that set up for the keg as well. I will see what I can find out for you. The cartridges that I saw when I shopped were more expensive than the CO2's I saw and purchased. --den

  • @denisdendrinos4538
    @denisdendrinos4538 Год назад

    Got some apple wine i want to carbonate for a sweet sparkling wine.
    I got the sweetner advice before but really want to use sugar
    Any guide on how much to and when to pasturise?
    Didnt see links to the vids you mentioned.

  • @toddsimi5998
    @toddsimi5998 Год назад +1

    Hi Bud. Were the Camden tablets for the ked really needed since you are pasteurizing?

  • @scottdebruyn7038
    @scottdebruyn7038 Год назад +4

    As a cider guy myself, I gotta ask, have you begun to experiment with different apple varieties? By far my favorite is a Macintosh apple. I've done all Macintosh in a 5 gallon batch (Cornelius keg carbonation) and to get sweet and carbonated, I had to overdo it with Sulfur (Camden & Meta-bi). It's turned out well, but took a year of aging to overcome the sulfur. My second batch I changed up with 75% Macintosh and 25% a mixture of Braeburns and (I think) Opals. This mixture is very different and I avoided sulfurs (other than sterilizing) by going to pasteurizing. I still want to find a true (inedible) cider apple (to mix with Macs off my tree) for the tannin. BTW, there is a bit of controversy (or perhaps matter of taste) where some that let ciders go past that quick yeast fermentation of ~5-8 days letting that 0.990-1.005 run into "secondary fermentation". That isn't fermentation, but a bacterial conversion of malic acid into lactic acid (malolactic 'fermentation') that is done to most red wines and sought in some whites (Chardonnay in particular) for that 'buttery' palette feel. Personally, I prefer the acidic bite and feel without the MLF in an apple cider. It seems that the apple flavor is diminished with the loss of the malic acid. Pasteurization stops MLF too. Don't know where you are in the country, but Macs are common to the Northwest (my neck of the woods). Have a look for them if you haven't tried them. 😁😋

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +2

      Sadly the only apples I can get are from the store. Not enough frost days here in the south. But I hope to do some single varietal experiments if I can find some better sources.
      I've done a few ciders in secondary for an additional month, but only to knock out the sulfur. Haven't picked up any mlf though.

  • @Grandpa_RLP
    @Grandpa_RLP Год назад

    I have pasteurized wine before and it pushed my corks out so I have to do it with no corks and foil over the top. Is it possible to do this with any other kind of bottle or is it flip top only? I bought that size keg and waiting to try it with a mead I have clearing. I just get the feeling it will not carb enough.

  • @crashclub8987
    @crashclub8987 Год назад

    Would it be possible to turn the keg upside down, then turn the gas on to the 20LB so it is forced into the liquid... Turn it over, bleed the pressure - repeat 2-3 times -- to mimic the soda-stream machine format? I'm still getting equipment to start and am looking at one of these instead of bottles to start.

  • @markkdg2236
    @markkdg2236 Год назад

    Can you keg a sweet cider and not pasteurize ? If it self carbonates then c02 canisters aren’t needed? Or you might use less . I bought an 8liter and I’ve used 3 canisters so far and I’m not half done with this batch. I know the relief valve will release if it gets too fizzy so I’m not afraid to try it

  • @chilecayenne
    @chilecayenne Год назад +2

    Great Video!
    Is there a way to hook a regular CO2 tank to that little Vevor regulator you have on that mini keg, or would you need different equipment to do that?
    Thank you in advance!
    CC

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +1

      Sorry, I really don't have any idea since I have no experience with full sized keg equipment.

  • @quarlow1215
    @quarlow1215 Год назад +2

    Ok, now I want to keg sweet sparling ciders. Can I do something like this with my Sodastream?

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +1

      I have never used one, so I don't know. I'm sure someone has tried it though:-)

  • @user-tk7pq6dl1o
    @user-tk7pq6dl1o 8 месяцев назад

    Hi There thanks for this. I also have a Vevor 5L keg. Question - I wanted to know after you initially brought the keg up to about 30psi with cartridge one, did you shut the valve off (if at all)? I'm trying to figure out when to shut regulator valve off after initial carbonation. I don't drink my keg batch right away. If I leave the valve open and keep the keg in a cool garage in an empty igloo type cooler, that 16gr cartridge will keep 30 psi maybe 3 days max. I'm wondering if I'd get better use of cartridge one if I shut if off initially after reaching the initial 30 PSI (of course giving it a few swirls the first few days). Yes I do release pressure to serve, but by then my initial cartridge usually empty (if regulator valve left open initially) and doesnt have enough to get back up to 25-30 without a new cartridge. I'm just trying to maintain carbonation without going through so many cartridges

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  7 месяцев назад

      You can't really avoid using a bunch of cartridges since they're so small. 1 to charge it, 1 to 2 to serve the whole gallon.

  • @samwuijster7150
    @samwuijster7150 Год назад +2

    How does it come that the foam is gone in seconds? Where it takes minutes with beer?

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад

      Beer has a lot more body from the proteins in the grain so the head stays longer than cider. Also, my dishwasher uses a rinse aid, and I've read that it can make your head drop quickly. But typically ciders will drop the head fast and just bubble gently after that like champagne.

  • @michaelbackhaus7879
    @michaelbackhaus7879 Год назад +2

    Could you bottle the apple cider in the keg after it is carbonated?

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад

      The concern with that is that it'll get oxidized during the transfer and also loose most of its carbonation. Oxidized cider tastes kind of skunky.

  • @ChooRoo
    @ChooRoo Год назад

    Dude, love your stuff but you gotta let that beard run free man. LET IT RIDE BABY OOOOOOOOW!

  • @ExceptionalCarpetCare
    @ExceptionalCarpetCare Год назад +2

    So is it possible to just pour the cider into a kettle and slowly heat it all at once to kill the yeast? Then just fill the keg?

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +1

      The biggest concern with that is oxidation. Exposing the cider to that much oxygen can potentially ruin the flavor. One of the other commenters mentioned that he's done it, but I'd have to try it myself before I can recommend it.

  • @DUMPTHETRUCK
    @DUMPTHETRUCK Год назад

    Nice video…I always have problems with bottling cider.. this definitely gave some things to think about…I do have a question. What do you do with the junk ,old yeast and spent corn or fruit left in your mash tun. I was dumping it by the house but my wife said it was attracting mice and it kills grass and plants..It’s too wet and heavy for trash bags in my can. I don’t want to dump it down my drains in the house. We used to make dog treats from my all grain mash runs….Anyone with any good ideas….T I A……

  • @larmiger
    @larmiger 10 месяцев назад

    Question - after you carbonate in the keg, can you pour it into bottles bypassing the natural carbonating process?

    • @user-tk7pq6dl1o
      @user-tk7pq6dl1o 8 месяцев назад +1

      I do it all the time. Buy a standard growler adapter - its stainless and has o-rings that help it fit nicely into the standard tap spigot of the vevor. The adapter has a graduated nipple at the other end that accepts its looks like a short length of 3/8" tubing. Just get deep enough into you bottles (12 or 16 oz) to prevent oxidation. Voila!

  • @littlehills739
    @littlehills739 Год назад +2

    so a towel over the esky / tub

  • @jacobburton678
    @jacobburton678 Год назад +1

    I have an off topic question I haven't been able to find an answer to. So if I do a stripping run and put it into my air still what proof should the solution be so it doesn't blow the top off my air still? Please help

  • @jenzu_h8798
    @jenzu_h8798 Год назад +2

    The unpasteurized bottles need to be consumed within a week or else you will have a bad time opening them :D Believe me I have experienced this. I would NOT leave unfinished fermentaition in a bottle for any period of time or temperature. They will eventually explode. After carbonation either pasturize or consume right away.

    • @kristoffer-robinlotze7273
      @kristoffer-robinlotze7273 Год назад +1

      I didn't have any problems with leaving my extremely carbonated (the yeast went bananas) in the fridge for months.

    • @jenzu_h8798
      @jenzu_h8798 Год назад +1

      @@kristoffer-robinlotze7273 everyone's fridge temperatures are different. Also where you keep it there affects. I would strongly advice against taking that risk. Bottle bombs are actually really dangerous. But just the mess alone is reason enough for me to not do that.

  • @grosuciprian
    @grosuciprian Год назад +2

    hey. quick question, did you filter the cider or is that the pectine enzime that did all the work to get it so clear? Thanks and awesome videos.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +2

      Pectic enzyme, time to settle and clear and cold crashing the bottles after they're pasteurized is all I do for clarifying.

    • @grosuciprian
      @grosuciprian Год назад +1

      @@BeardedBored thanks, since i discovered your channel i really became interested in brewing. Much love from Romania.

  • @erossi490
    @erossi490 Год назад +2

    Can you use a growler which uses CO2

  • @2020klwiet
    @2020klwiet 7 месяцев назад

    I had my tester bottles full carb and none of my swing top bottles “brand new” did not carb.

  • @adamzamora983
    @adamzamora983 Год назад +2

    Bearded, is the 590 worth the upgrade from the 580?

  • @nebulink
    @nebulink Год назад

    why not carbonate the keg the same way you do the bottles? The dispenser has a pressure relief valve. So it should be safe, right? Let it go for 5 days and then pasteurize to kill the yeast.

  • @gregoiredupriez954
    @gregoiredupriez954 Год назад +1

    If you want to avoid pasteurisation, you can simply lower the amount of sugar you add in the bottles. Like you would do to a beer. You'll get a lighter carbonation but you can keep those bottles until the next apple season.
    The part about how you want sweetness in your drink and are therefore forced to pasteurise made me think : I know that for sparkling wines they add sugar a first time for carbonation, then slowly rotate the bottles upside down over the course of a few days. That way the yeast (that goes dormant because there is no more sugar at this point) will drop in the neck of the bottle. They then freeze the top of the bottle with all the yeast stuck in the ice, pop the bottles open to release this yeast block and then finally add some syrup to sweeten the final drink and make up for the lost liquid due to the poping. Close your bottles again and you've got a sweet and sparkling drink.
    Of course this is not at all practical to do at home but this is just to add to the debate.

  • @jorgenjohnson2168
    @jorgenjohnson2168 Год назад

    So disappointed that Aldi stopped selling their pumpkin spice and swing top bottles

  • @happyhillbilly3466
    @happyhillbilly3466 Год назад

    just wondering if the tee shirt give away is real. seems like a scam

  • @tomgoodwin7134
    @tomgoodwin7134 Год назад

    Get a real keg

  • @biggametex
    @biggametex Год назад +1

    cant you take the contents of the keg and put it in a pot on the stove top 140 degrees, then put it in a keg? right?

  • @DustyPlunkett-sg4kn
    @DustyPlunkett-sg4kn 9 месяцев назад

    Outstanding video,very informative and easy to follow thank you.

  • @DustyPlunkett-sg4kn
    @DustyPlunkett-sg4kn 9 месяцев назад

    Outstanding video,very informative and easy to follow thank you.