I found this to be the most difficult part during my first attempt at brewing. All I had was a tube and a racking cane. Is there anything else to simplify the process and prevent me from ending up with almost a full beer on my kitchen floor?
10 Answers
Buy a bottling bucket and a bottling wand, it should cost you less than $15 combined and will save you a ton of pain. Cut a small (2-3") piece of 3/8" beverage tubing and connect the wand directly to the spigot on your bottling bucket, so that it looks like this:
Notice that I put it over the dishwasher with the door open, the door will catch any spillage. Take sanitized bottle, raise to bottling wand, fill, and set it aside with a cap sitting on the top. Once you've done 6-12, cap a batch. Repeat until your bottling bucket runs empty.
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2I have fully converted to this method and I can say that I am happier with all aspects of my life. I think my hair has started to grow back! Commented Mar 11, 2010 at 19:41
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1Wow... that's just... wow. Great idea. Don't need a bottle tree, don't have to worry about spill... dang. That's great. Best tip I've read on bottling so far.– EllCommented Jan 21, 2011 at 20:39
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Dishwashing the bottles is genius, why have I never tried that! Commented Aug 22, 2011 at 17:29
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Do you wash the bottles in the dishwasher too, or just use it as a place to dry them? Could running the dishwasher with sanitizer instead of powder detergent be an option? Commented Oct 11, 2011 at 20:24
I use a spring loaded bottling wand at the end of a tube from the spigot on my bottling bucket. Sometimes I get leaks. I'm considering racking directly to a keg next time and doing nothing but kegerators. Could save a lot of time and washing.
I have tried a couple extra tools, but found that most auto-siphons aren't worth the plastic they're made of. In the end, moving your beer to an ale pale with a spigot (to pour from into bottles), is the best thing you can do with a simple set up.
Switch to kegs.
But seriously, check out the spring loaded bottling wand. Also a racking cane clip to hold it in place.
I too dislike the bottling process the most. It's easily the most labor intensive. Aside from what others have said the biggest helps I have found are - friends. Get one person per station (ie rinse bottle - sanitize bottle - fill bottle - cap it - label it) and it goes much fast. I know I know - duh - but it just goes that much faster.
I put my beer in an ale pail with a spigot. (see my question about spigots)
It's super easy to just open the spigot, fill the bottle, and close the spigot.
I also generally have a pail with sani in it, so I dip, pour, fill, cap, repeat. Makes it much easier.
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Aren't you worried about oxidation splashing the beer into the bottle from the spigot??– dsidab81Commented Feb 8, 2012 at 18:31
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Not really. I tilt the bottles, and the flow isn't that fast. A solution would be to throw 6" of tubing on the spigot so that the beer fills from the bottom. Commented Feb 13, 2012 at 16:53
I just picked up a counter pressure filler. Will allow me to keg the beer and carbonate to a specific level without hassling with a bottling bucket or priming sugar.
When using the spring loaded bottling wand I always make sure to pull apart the spring loaded part and soak all the little bits in sanitizing solution. I have mine connected to the bottling bucket by a 1 inch piece of tubing.
Also, when I keg a batch and want a bottle, I don't wait for it to be carbonated, As soon as fill the keg, I immediately fill several bottles from the sanitized faucet. I use Munton's carb tabs when I do that.
+1 for switching to kegs. You can use grollers and use a blichmann bottle wand for bringing your brews to others. Kegging is very enjoyable, bottling is hell. Plus you can control your CO2 volume.