Draft Beer System: Efficiently Serving Cool, Enticing Beer

Posted by John Fostar
6
Sep 25, 2013
1146 Views
Image There are loads of reasons to invest in a draft beer system. Whether you own a bar and need to offer gallons of beer on a commercial basis, or want to install a high-end home bar, a beer storage and serving system is likely to be your first item of interest. While bottled beer has its usefulness, draft beer has its own charm, and together with the right serving mechanism, draft beer becomes an unique beverage experience that bottled beer cannot match.

Draft beer has more taste than the one stored in bottles. The beer you drink from bottles has undergone a pasteurization process. While this makes it easier to store bottled beer at higher temperature, pasteurization removes much of the natural flavor of beer. As a result, what you get out of the keg almost always tastes better than what you drink out of a beer bottle.

The challenges of storing and dispensing beer through a keg are many. That is why bottled beer might be preferred in some bars and for home consumption, but if you can work around the problem of storage, cooling, and pouring, there are many reasons to invest in draft beer.

A draft beer system helps you overcome these problems. While the keg might be refrigerated to keep it cool, you need a draft beer dispenser to span the distance between storage and the consumer. That is achieved by using a beer serving system, which maintains the cool temperature of beer, pours it cleanly, and controls spilling. Then there are many other reasons to love beer from a keg.

What Constitutes a Beer Dispensing System?

Draft beer is cheaper. For bulk purchase, kegs work out cheaper than bottles. Its taste makes it more popular. The problem of storage is taken care of by refrigeration system, and you can serve the beer in style, thanks to a draft beer system, which also includes beer towers, beer trays, and glycol decks.



Beer towers are the serving point. The beer pours out through the taps. Depending on the bar size, a beer tower can have one, two, or even seven taps. Beer towers are available in a variety of styles. North American beer towers are quite popular. These rugged, hardy styles are emblematic of all that beer stands for. European styles, with their elegant, clean lines, are fast becoming a trend as well. You could even go for beer towers mixing both styles, with European style tower frame and North American faucets.

The beer lines must be kept cool to ensure that the beer stays chilled even when it is outside the refrigerator. This is the role of the glycol decks. A mixture of glycol and water is usually created to cool the system. This mixture forms part of the glycol deck. The temperatures can be set to a particular level to ensure that the beer stays chilled but does not freeze or become too warm. Glycol decks also have an anti freeze to ensure controlled chilling.

Beer trays prevent drips from getting out of hand, and some beer trays have drains to make the process more effective. A draft beer system is a wonderful way to present tasty, chilled beer to customers at the bar. A smaller system can be set up for the mini bar at home. 

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