That would be interesting... Does anyone know of local vendors around here doing this? I bet they put a lot of added pressure on the corny keg market in Eastern Canada... be interesting to see if it catches on...
http://www.canadianbeernews.com/2011/11 ... in-ottawa/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Selling Beer in Corny Kegs
- benwedge
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Re: Selling Beer in Corny Kegs
That seems like an interesting (er... strange) way to do it. A corny keg only holds 40 pints, so if they're even moderately busy that means there's a lot of keg changing going on. Keg changing is time not spent keeping customers happy.
Brewing right now: whatever is going on tap at Stillwell in a few weeks.
- benwedge
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Re: Selling Beer in Corny Kegs
Scratch that. Re-read the article. They're selling the beer in corny kegs expressly for the home market, with regular kegs (and growlers) to come soon.benwedge wrote:That seems like an interesting (er... strange) way to do it. A corny keg only holds 40 pints, so if they're even moderately busy that means there's a lot of keg changing going on. Keg changing is time not spent keeping customers happy.
Brewing right now: whatever is going on tap at Stillwell in a few weeks.
- derek
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Re: Selling Beer in Corny Kegs
It does say they're planning Sankes for bars. Once that happens, I bet the cornys come right back on the market...benwedge wrote:That seems like an interesting (er... strange) way to do it. A corny keg only holds 40 pints, so if they're even moderately busy that means there's a lot of keg changing going on. Keg changing is time not spent keeping customers happy.
Currently on tap: Nothing!
In keg: Still nothing.
In Primary: Doggone American Rye Pale Ale
In keg: Still nothing.
In Primary: Doggone American Rye Pale Ale
- NASH
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Re: Selling Beer in Corny Kegs
It's very common for start-up breweries to use cornies, or it used to be since they were more readily available and a lot cheaper to source than sankey kegs. An awful local microbrewery I used to be affiliated with still had 400 of them in service to pubs in 2008. Oh and they had a brand new $22,000 keg washer that would only wash sankeys





- akr71
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Re: Selling Beer in Corny Kegs
I bet they go right back into the owner's garages where they came from. It says the brewery was founded by 4 homebrewers. I wouldn't be surprised if this started as a way to legally sell 'homebrew' to their buddies.derek wrote:It does say they're planning Sankes for bars. Once that happens, I bet the cornys come right back on the market...benwedge wrote:That seems like an interesting (er... strange) way to do it. A corny keg only holds 40 pints, so if they're even moderately busy that means there's a lot of keg changing going on. Keg changing is time not spent keeping customers happy.
Andy
"Now son, you don't want to drink beer. That's for Daddies, and kids with fake IDs." - Homer J. Simpson
"Now son, you don't want to drink beer. That's for Daddies, and kids with fake IDs." - Homer J. Simpson
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