Post by JoergThanks, interesting read. Brewing is more complicated that I remember.
Depends what you want. Assuming you want decent beer, sure it is a
little complicated. The old-line terrible method as still practiced by
some folks who are mostly into cheapness is something like dump a can of
hopped extract into a 4-5 gallon pot with 2.5 gallons of water and 4
pounds of cane sugar, boil, dump in a bucket with a couple gallons of
cold water, add a packet of dry yeast once it's not too hot, slap in an
airlock and bottle it in a week, then get it drunk up in a couple weeks.
Not my method.
Specifically, I use a 10 gallon pot for a 5 gallon batch [a full boil"
as opposed to a "partial boil"], I never use hopped extract (I use
hops), I almost always use "specialty grains" (lots of chocolate malt,
sometimes other stuff) and the only thing I'll ever use cane sugar for
is priming, and not often. I do make meads and braggots with honey, but
for beer, I use barley malt only. My easy-method preference is dry malt
extract - it stores forever if kept dry and it's easier to handle than
syrup.
I now do some "partial mash" work with some normal malt mixed in with
the chocolate as the water is heating in the kettle, and stopping the
heating for a while at various points, then draining the mesh bag (5
gallon paint strainer bags) over the kettle. I continue to resist "all
grain" in all it's time-suck glory and computer-geek temptations to
"build a RIMS" Recirculating Infusion Mash System - pumped wort,
immersion heaters, precise temperature profiles, all sorts of cash-suck
and time suck.
My fermentation regime is a week in primary whether or not it needs it
and two weeks in secondary whether or not it needs it. Any sign of
continued activity in secondary and it can stay there for another month
or three; I don't like bottle bombs. If there's much sign of activity in
primary after a week it can spend two weeks in there before it gets
moved.
Whenever I get off my butt and bottle it, it then spends 2 weeks at a
minimum priming and usually more like a month, then it stores for as
long as it does until I get around to drinking it. I use glass bottles,
I've never paid extra for "oxygen absorbing caps" and years is not a
problem. I use a method similar in principle to the "primetabs" product
- I mix my priming sugar in a small amount of water, boil and cool,
calculate the volume per bottle, put it in the sanitized bottle and fill
directly, without the "mixing priming sugar into the beer in a bottling
bucket" step - that is largely from "fear of oxidation at that
particular step." If you use a fermenter with a tap on the bottom
(what's normally thought of as a bottling bucket) it's easy to do the
same with no pumping. I use glass for everything and I'm not drilling
holes in my carboys. I love siphoning stuff in general, but fermented
beer is frustrating as the dissolved CO2 tends to bubble out in the top
of the siphon, eventually breaking it, and then you have a gallon of
beer left that is a royal pain to get into bottles without a pump.
Casual sanitation folks will just suck on it - I'm not a casual
sanitation folk. Not having to pick up full glass carboys is another
advantage to pumping, but that's far less of an issue with plastic
buckets.
I do, as a rule, use dry yeast, mostly Danstar, and I have yet to find
much appeal in the liquid yeast, other than when I "wash" my own yeast
for reuse. It's another rabbit hole you can go down - or not.
Post by JoergThen I should spend more time piecing together all the parts. A 5-6
gallon food grade pail sounds good, maybe HW stores have that.
Free ones are commonly from bakeries/grocery-store bakeries/donut
shops/restaurants - ask. Will cost a bit of baking soda and time to get
the frosting (or whatever) smell out. Pickle buckets are probably a bad
idea. A starter kit from a homebrew supply will have a couple, normally
and might work out to a deal, overall - they want to get you hooked.
Post by JoergA pool pump or something similar would be easy to set up. IIRC we used
gravity feed in the olden days.
I'd question the ability to sanitize and food-grade-ness of a pool pump.
Just siphon into a bottling bucket with gravity and use the spigot on
the bottling bucket to bottle. Or put spigots in all your buckets and
don't siphon anything, as you prefer. When I pump, I peristaltic, so the
pump never touches the beer - just the sanitized food-grade tubing does.
Post by JoergI could bite myself. Grandpa had several massive glass carboys and as a
kid I had no clue what those were for so we left them there when
cleaning out the house.
Oops happens.
Post by JoergOh, oh, turf protection games?
Legitimate fear of introducing disease by shipping plants - but you
might be further south than I mis-remembered.
--
Cats, coffee, chocolate...vices to live by
Please don't feed the trolls. Killfile and ignore them so they will go away.