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DIY Fermenter on the Cheap!

Discussion in 'Equipment/Sanitation' started by DocAJ, Aug 13, 2012.

 

  1. #1
    DocAJ

    Member

    Posted Aug 13, 2012
    If made a bunch of these, for around $1.10 each. Took a gallon pickle jar, drilled a hole for a gasket and popped in an air lock. I plan to use them for small batch experiments and what not. All you have to buy is the gasket and the air lock. Cheers!

    Pickle Jar.jpg
     
    nukebrewer likes this.
  2. #2
    KISS Brew

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 13, 2012
    I actually really like that, especially compared with the 1 gallon wine jugs I've seen people use. Thanks for the tip.
     
  3. #3
    nukebrewer

    Brew the brew!  

    Posted Aug 14, 2012
    Yeah, that's pretty BA. I'm going to do that next time I want to do a small batch.
     
  4. #4
    lutherslagers

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 14, 2012
    clever. I'm thinking small batch meads. thank you for sharing.
     
  5. #5
    pfgonzo

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Aug 14, 2012
    If you were able to get pickle smell out of the lid, then you're a better man than I. The wife and I make pickles all the time, and our Mason Jars are dedicated pickle jars now.
     
  6. #6
    PosterGuy

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 14, 2012
    I suppose you could make a starter in there...lol
     
  7. #7
    DocAJ

    Member

    Posted Aug 14, 2012

    I got the smell out of the jar fairly easily after a couple soaks in PBW, but the lid was another issue. On the advice of a friend, I put the lids in a shallow dish of water in the sun all day and let the UV do the trick. Worked like a charm. I was struggling with getting the smell out of the lid until he suggested it.
     
  8. #8
    LuiInIdaho

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Aug 14, 2012
    We have been doing this for awhile for small batches of wine. We got started because we ran out of 1 gallon jugs that we were using. This has been working great. What I like about this is that you suggested where to get that gallon jar. It is a quick, easy, and cheap fix. Thanks for sharing.
     
  9. #9
    lebucheron

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 14, 2012
    awesome idea. Thanks!
     
  10. #10
    pfgonzo

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Aug 14, 2012
    Nod. The glass is nonreactive and not an issue. I'll try the water-in-the-sun trick on the lid! Thanks!
     
    TopherM likes this.
  11. #11
    bja

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 14, 2012
    That's what I use to make starters in.
     
  12. #12
    KeythL

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 14, 2012
    +1 (I actually use 1/2 gallon Mason jars...but same idea). You can get a rubber grommet like you get with an ale pale at the hardware store for 20 cents and make it air tight too.

    Keyth
     
  13. #13
    TimpanogosSlim

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 15, 2012
    My older brother used to make his bread yeast & sugar hooch in those. Except he used the plastic ones and i'm pretty sure just manually relieved pressure every now and then.

    Kept the damn things on a heating pad in the closet. Must have been terrible stuff.
     
  14. #14
    lebucheron

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 22, 2012
    Bought 2 of these on a trip to Costco. Got the glass soaking in some oxyclean solution and the lids sitting in the sun with some water in them. Thanks!
    Are these gasket's you used easy to find at a hardware store? What are they normally used for? If I can't find them I'm thinking of just dedicating a few airlocks and silicon around the hole to seal them.
     
  15. #15
    bja

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 22, 2012
    You don't need airlocks, just leave the lid loose.
     
  16. #16
    lebucheron

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 22, 2012
    hmmm. I'd be using these a secondaries and wouldn't have as much CO2 pushing out air and such. Have you tried just leaving the lid on loose a good week or two after the vigorous fermentation is done in primary? It would make my life easier...
     
  17. #17
    dzlater

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 23, 2012
    Or aluminum foil.
     
  18. #18
    lebucheron

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 23, 2012
    So just to reiterate, not making a starter in these, just using them as small secondary carboys. Still ok to just let the lids sit loose or need airlock?
     
  19. #19
    DocAJ

    Member

    Posted Aug 23, 2012
    My LHBS had the gaskets, but I'm sure a hardware store would have them as well...
     
  20. #20
    DocAJ

    Member

    Posted Aug 23, 2012
    Not sure aboutletting the lids loose, but the ease and inexpensiveness of installing the airlock has me using the airlock. I dont use my just for secondary (although with my Hefe, I'm going to do the secondary with a gallon of the wort and some watermelon), but for smaller and experimental batches (planning to do a 5 gallon stout batch and ferment each gallon witha different strain of yeast).
     
  21. #21
    jcor9821

    New Member

    Posted Aug 24, 2012
    I really like that idea for experimenting brew!:drunk:
     
  22. #22
    jcor9821

    New Member

    Posted Aug 24, 2012
    Awesome idea!
     
  23. #23
    bja

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 24, 2012
    If you tighten the lid and then just crack it loose, it will be sitting on the seal and not let anything in, but co2 pressure will lift it enough to let any pressure out.

    It's not rocket science.
     
  24. #24
    YulebeHoppin

    Active Member

    Posted Aug 24, 2012
    I make kefir in a pickle jar, and do the same thing.
     
  25. #25
    Reaver

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 24, 2012
    I have used them for starters for a while now. If you clean them up quickly (eat the pickles quickly) then its not so hard to get out. I have a bunch of 1/2 gal ones from my parents. I used them for Starsan containers originally and after the first run thru Starsan they are pretty clean.
     
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