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Please Start Using Beer Serving Tanks

  • Oct 18, 2021
  • 83
  • tiantai
A conditioning tank is where beer conditions after fermentation. Conditioning can be done in the conical fermenter (after yeast harvest), or in a non-pressurized tank made for that purpose. You can also use a serving tank or a bright beer tank.
A serving tank is a tank that can hold pressure so you can carbonate your beer. You can also serve right from it. This tank is kept in a cold room and does not have a jacket.
A bright beer tank, is like a serving tank, but it is jacketed and not in a cold room. It can sit right in the same room as your brewhouse. If you want to serve out of it, you need a separate glycol trunk line connecting from the tank to your beer taps. Or, you need to fill kegs from it and serve out of them.
Bright beer tanks are typically used for packaging breweries. The bright beer tank holds the beer that is bright, carbonated, and available for packaging. So, from the fermenter the beer is filtered, carbonated inline and sent to the bright beer tank. Once it is in the bright beer tank, it is adjusted for the proper carbonation needed for packaging.
Unless you are a packaging brewery, you could instead go with serving tanks. They are cheaper, they do not require expensive glycol systems to keep them cool or to run a beer line from.


With a serving tank you simply put them in your cooler, and if you are lucky and can place the cooler behind your bar, you can run a beer line from the tank right through the wall to your beer taps.
If you are using only one bright beer tank, that means all the beer you serve out of it will have to be kegged. That takes up a lot of space compared to a serving tank. For example a 7BBL serving tank equals 14 kegs. A 7BBL serving tank is about 40 inches in diameter and about 6 feet high. 14 kegs is, well a lot of space. Plus every one of them weighs 160 pounds! In addition, you wind up changing kegs all the time: a real hassle on a busy Friday night. And finally, cleaning 14 kegs takes a whole lot longer than doing a CIP on one serving tank.
You will need a cold room anyway for some kegs and your hops and yeast. It doesn’t need to be that much bigger to accommodate serving tanks.

If you are planning a brewery that is either a tasting room or a brewpub and not a large packaging brewery, you will be very pleased in the long run going the serving tank route.
 

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