Scroll through and check it out, look for Beer Borg in the club name section for the winners.

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I didn't post it but it's from this thread here. http://beerborg.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=6936Inkleg wrote:Congratulations!!!
Is your Danky Pale Ale listed here?
>..Inkleg runs off to the recipe section..<
Very simple recipe, inspired by Two Hearted Ale but the keg hops I added changed it up quite a bit, turning it very danky, hence the name. 4 Gal batch, kind of a test run.Inkleg wrote:Congratulations!!!
Is your Danky Pale Ale listed here?
>..Inkleg runs off to the recipe section..<
Ok well I have been doing things different for the past year or so. I now ferment in my corny kegs. I go from fermentation, naturally carbonate (spunding) and then serve all in the same keg. No transfers (at all), and except for keg hopping, the beer is never expossed to oxygen post fermentation. But with keg hopping I added them after fermentation and after carbonation. With the headspace full of co2 I believe it helps to minimize the oxidation. The beer was drinkable and was already a couple weeks post fermention when I bled the co2 popped the lid and added the hops in hop sacs. They have been in for several weeks now, this whole time. No off flavors, no grassy notes...all pure fresh hop flavor and incredible aroma. These beers we're brewed on June 11th. So they are around 10 weeks old and the keg hops have been in about 6. Again no funky flavors, no grassy notes, and no autolysis from the yeast. The beer is still sitting on the original yeast cake. If anything the changes to my process have improved my beer s and debunked a lot of myth in my opinion.BlackDuck wrote:That's awesome. Congratulations.
Question on your keg hopping...Did you leave those in for a period of time, or just put them in the keg and leave them there?