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I missed the part about, "my tilt will fit now!" I have plans to eventually pick up a Tilt but assumed it'd be a no-go in my LBMB. You're sure it will work in there?
Yep, works great. It floats, measures, and sends info the way I would expect it.

I have not dry hopped my 2 batches yet. I thought about adding the dry hops during active fermentation, but my preference is to dry hop for a short period of time. I am thinking I will add a small amount of crushed campden tablet along with the dry hop addition. I have also had good luck bottling hoppy beers purging the headspace of the bottle with CO2.
I have debated the crushed campden, but I always kinda forget that it could be an option. When I was using a bucket or my old bmb without the spigot, I would often try tossing just a bit of table sugar in with the dry hop to scrub a little extra. I really couldn't say if it worked or not. Now I watch my tilts and toss it in towards the end of fermentation and it has helped my process quite a bit. Definitely far from perfect, but it has helped. I, too, prefer to leave my hops in for a shorter amount of time, but until I figure out a better way of going about that after fermentation has ended, i'm generally stuck with a 5-7 day dry hop. I have'nt had any terrible flavors/aromas due to it yet, though.
 
Any of you have a tricked out 1 gallon brewing system? Something with some serious stainless or recirculation or temp control. Yes. Yes. Overkill but just wondering. I’ve scaled down from 10gal to 5gal to 2.5gal and am considering leaving the hobby all together (see my page in the For Sale section). But I’m reconsidering just scaling down again to something in the 1-1.5gal range vs. just dumping the hobby all together. Anyway, I’m wondering what some of you have by way of bling factor with your systems. Post it up if you would. Thanks!
 
Any of you have a tricked out 1 gallon brewing system? Something with some serious stainless or recirculation or temp control. Yes. Yes. Overkill but just wondering.

I think I know the guy... @HardyFool!! There is a video of his system somewhere in this thread.

I feel like 2.5 gallons is about a sweet spot. What did you not like about that size? For that size I could see the Anvil Foundry 6.5 gallon system for brew day, the SS Brewtech 3.5 gal Brew Bucket Mini for fermentation (maybe with a small fridge for temp control) and some of the Torpedo 2.5 gallon kegs.

That said, I just brewed my second all-grain 1-gallon batch using my setup up a few posts (the 2 gallon insulated jug, a 3 gallon kettle, and the Little Big Mouth Bubbler fermenter). I brewed a few other 1-gallon all-grain batches in the past, but the insulated jug helps and I really like having a fermenter with a spigot for 1-person bottling.

I tend to brew investigative batches in the one gallon size. They have mostly been to try out different hops or base grains, but I hope to use that size for recipe trials in the future. I like a larger fermenter so I can get about 9 bottles out of a batch. That gives me enough to sample myself and to bring them along to a homebrew club meeting.
 
I think I know the guy... @HardyFool!! There is a video of his system somewhere in this thread.

I feel like 2.5 gallons is about a sweet spot. What did you not like about that size? For that size I could see the Anvil Foundry 6.5 gallon system for brew day, the SS Brewtech 3.5 gal Brew Bucket Mini for fermentation (maybe with a small fridge for temp control) and some of the Torpedo 2.5 gallon kegs.

That said, I just brewed my second all-grain 1-gallon batch using my setup up a few posts (the 2 gallon insulated jug, a 3 gallon kettle, and the Little Big Mouth Bubbler fermenter). I brewed a few other 1-gallon all-grain batches in the past, but the insulated jug helps and I really like having a fermenter with a spigot for 1-person bottling.

I tend to brew investigative batches in the one gallon size. They have mostly been to try out different hops or base grains, but I hope to use that size for recipe trials in the future. I like a larger fermenter so I can get about 9 bottles out of a batch. That gives me enough to sample myself and to bring them along to a homebrew club meeting.

I love the amount of beer I end up with at the end. 2.5 gallons is great. I actually really love my setup I’m just looking at a change. Hoping to reduce my foot print and also the amount of time hunched over a sink! :)

As for your recommendation of @HardyFool Iam a subscriber to his channel. :) I’d just forgotten about his setup. Thanks for the reminder. If there are others I’d love to see them.
 
Any of you have a tricked out 1 gallon brewing system? Something with some serious stainless or recirculation or temp control. Yes. Yes. Overkill but just wondering. I’ve scaled down from 10gal to 5gal to 2.5gal and am considering leaving the hobby all together (see my page in the For Sale section). But I’m reconsidering just scaling down again to something in the 1-1.5gal range vs. just dumping the hobby all together. Anyway, I’m wondering what some of you have by way of bling factor with your systems. Post it up if you would. Thanks!

I don't remember seeing this idea recently in "1 gal brewers unite".
 
I think I know the guy... @HardyFool!! There is a video of his system somewhere in this thread.

I feel like 2.5 gallons is about a sweet spot. What did you not like about that size? For that size I could see the Anvil Foundry 6.5 gallon system for brew day, the SS Brewtech 3.5 gal Brew Bucket Mini for fermentation (maybe with a small fridge for temp control) and some of the Torpedo 2.5 gallon kegs.

That said, I just brewed my second all-grain 1-gallon batch using my setup up a few posts (the 2 gallon insulated jug, a 3 gallon kettle, and the Little Big Mouth Bubbler fermenter). I brewed a few other 1-gallon all-grain batches in the past, but the insulated jug helps and I really like having a fermenter with a spigot for 1-person bottling.

I tend to brew investigative batches in the one gallon size. They have mostly been to try out different hops or base grains, but I hope to use that size for recipe trials in the future. I like a larger fermenter so I can get about 9 bottles out of a batch. That gives me enough to sample myself and to bring them along to a homebrew club meeting.

That is pretty much my setup now, Anvil 6.5 Foundry, Anvil 6.5 gallon fermenter, Coke 3 gallon pin-lock kegs. I down-sized from 15 gallon Blichmann hardware. I am currently in an apartment, so run a cord from the dryer out to the porch to brew. Will have a garage when I move into my townhouse later this fall, but don't expect going back to a full-size system. I would rather brew more often and more varieties of beer, as making it is the part of the hobby I enjoy.

BrewGear.jpg


BrewingAction.jpg
 
I recently downsized from 5 gal also. I pieced together a 2.5 gal system over the winter using a 6 gal Bayou Classic steamer kettle, Unibrau 120V controller(or Inkbird IPB-16s), 1650 Watt element and various weldless TC fittings from Bobby @ brewhardware.com. So far I am very happy with it. If I ever wanted to scale down any further I would just buy a smaller kettle and transfer everything over. But right now I feel like 2.5 -3 gal is just right for me. I do love brewing with electric vs. propane though.



small batch.jpg
 
I recently downsized from 5 gal also. I pieced together a 2.5 gal system over the winter using a 6 gal Bayou Classic steamer kettle, Unibrau 120V controller(or Inkbird IPB-16s), 1650 Watt element and various weldless TC fittings from Bobby @ brewhardware.com. So far I am very happy with it. If I ever wanted to scale down any further I would just buy a smaller kettle and transfer everything over. But right now I feel like 2.5 -3 gal is just right for me. I do love brewing with electric vs. propane though.



View attachment 731764

Nice! No matter how many Bobby videos I watch on silver soldering, I just can't pull it off. It's not my thing apparently. I use TC fittings pretty much everywhere else. I did buy the female threaded TC fitting for the valves on the Anvils. Being brewing specific equipment, I wish Anvil would have provided TC fittings out-of-the-box. It would have been worth the extra cost. Of course I just bought my Anvil a couple weeks ago, with the pump kit, and NOW they come out with the stainless steel head for the pump. Argh! It's like buying Apple products.
 
The beer in my prior post (a Rahr 2-Row SMaSH) turned out okay. The Rahr is a very clean/plain base malt. I might have added too much Warrior as it is a touch bitter. I do get some herbal character from the Warrior hops. I have a few more malts that I want to use for SMaSH beers.

But...two of my DIY 1.5 gal fermenters cracked so I only have one in working condition. I really like doing multiple small batches and split experiments. Recently Midwest Supply had a free-shipping special so I picked up a pair of the Little Big Mouth Bubblers (and a few other items to get to the free shipping amount). I debated about the glass vs the plastic ones and I went with the glass. The drilled hole for the spigot is pretty rough, so hopefully glass was the right choice. There is a lot of headspace in these for a full 1 gallons of wort!

Within an hour of UPS dropping off the box, I was brewing batches to fill them. These are "Hazy Hop Samplers". Each batch is 3/4 lb Pilsen DME and 3/4 lb Wheat DME. 1 oz of hops added at 180F (Idaho 7 in one and Vic Secret in the other). I split a pack of Lallemand East Coast NEIPA dry yeast between the two. I plan to dry hop each with another 1 oz of hops. I still need to figure out my exact plan to bottle these while limiting oxidation. I might just purge the headspace of the bottles with CO2, or I might add some crushed Campden tablet, or both.

View attachment 727558
Hi, recently joined the forum and I do 1 gallon brews. Just curious about the cap on these fermenters. Are they a type of air lock?
 
Hi, recently joined the forum and I do 1 gallon brews. Just curious about the cap on these fermenters. Are they a type of air lock?

The Little Big Mouth Bubblers come with 3 different "caps". One is just a screw on cap. Another is a bung for an airlock (as shown in the pic by @BrewnWKopperKat). The other is the one shown in my picture which I think is some type of air lock replacement cap. The fermenters do not come with any instructions, but the idea might be that you could add liquid to the cup in the lid with that cap and it would work much like an airlock.

For me, I often just cover my fermenters with foil for the first day or two. This is mostly to avoid suck back as the temperature stabilizes before fermentation starts. Those caps seemed like they would work for this purpose. I then swapped over to the bung and airlock after a day or two.
 
They are great since they are a bit over 1 gallon with a wide mouth if you're doing things with bigger pieces and want to use a BIAB to hold it all in at the start and then take out but maybe, like myself, prefer a full one gallon on secondary in a traditional 'jug'. (for cider or wine or something which I like 1 gal experiments) Mine are also the ones with no spigot. Nothing extra to clean or wear out or leak. Long term use. Spigot on my 30L Spiedel makes sense but on a 4L?
 
I've always done 5 gallons, but I've thought about experimenting with some 1-gallon batches of extract and kveik "speed beer" this summer. It would be a quick and painless brew day because of the smaller equipment, and it doesn't even have to be an hour long boil if you are making a rough approximation of a farmhouse style. And you could be drinking it in 3 days.
 
I think I know the guy... @HardyFool!! There is a video of his system somewhere in this thread.

Haha indeed, glad I've made a splash!

I dig everyone's rigs from the last page and a half, but re: tricking out, I've probably taken it as far as maybe anyone ever will - the reward is 98% the journey, since I hate most beers I make (granted, I'm extremely picky). Electric kettle, HERMS, pump, thermowell, all of it. After having brewed a number of (honestly, not that solid) beers on it, here are my thoughts about tricking out on the small scale:
  • It's a ton of cleaning! A HERMS coil kind of takes a ton of water to flush out post-PBW in and of itself, and scrubbing a (tri-clamp) heating element each time with a scouring pad each time rides the line between zen and time wasting
    • This system was built to solve two problems: step mashes and temp stability, and for the former, it's not powerful enough, and for the latter, recirculating does help with heat distribution, but I think a pump with well-insulated tubing, and regular (and calculated) additions of boiling water may be way simpler and easier, and maybe better - less chance of dirty, impossible-to-hand-clean stainless messing up your beer
  • The electric kettle is great, but the curvature of small kettles makes installation of large holes (like a tri-clamp that can accommodate a heating element) really hard, unless you can weld stainless (scoff!)
    • I think the move is to install a sight gauge and small ball valve and just go with induction. To heck with a full element, and if your induction range has a % power option, then you don't even need a control box
  • The chilling coil is nice for rapid, more or less sanitary chilling, though - and the pump rocks. Maybe the best part of the system, but again, you have the cleaning question. I think the move may actually be a plate chiller (I think I was going to grab this one before my HERMS plan), and if you ditch the HERMS, this makes a ton of sense, though cleaning and sanitation come back into play - flush this think with off-boil wort for a few minutes, et voila re: sanitation
  • And all of the temperature control during fermentation is 100% a must for a small batch - BUT I haven't had a batch bubble through an airlock in years, in part, I think, due to both fermenter choice, and the use of multiple grommets; the grommet-thermowell connection is fairly loose, and this device hasn't entirely solved the problem
So yeah, in summary, fermentation control is a great idea, but I'm not convinced that the most extreme hard core tech path is the best; I did it to see if it were possible, but I may just retreat somewhat, if my upcoming trials (brewing the same beer with varying levels of kit, running water through my system to suss out the source of odd flavors) push me at all in that direction
 
Spigot on my 30L Spiedel makes sense but on a 4L?

Since I am bottling all my small batches and 95% of the time I am alone on bottling day (and 5G signals have not caused me to grow a 3rd arm yet) the spigots at least make bottling possible. Oxidation scares me enough these days, so bottling directly out of the spigot without having to use something like an auto-siphon at least gives me some confidence that I can bottle quality beers.

I actually just purchased a 1-gallon Fermonster with a spigot as well. I think it maxes out at around 1.2 gallons of space. So now I have 4 small fermenters with spigots, and a few other options for small fermenters without spigots. I might pick up one of the plastic Little Big Mouth Bubblers to add to my collection (for a while they were not selling the plastic version).
 
Since I am bottling all my small batches and 95% of the time I am alone on bottling day (and 5G signals have not caused me to grow a 3rd arm yet) the spigots at least make bottling possible. Oxidation scares me enough these days, so bottling directly out of the spigot without having to use something like an auto-siphon at least gives me some confidence that I can bottle quality beers.

I actually just purchased a 1-gallon Fermonster with a spigot as well. I think it maxes out at around 1.2 gallons of space. So now I have 4 small fermenters with spigots, and a few other options for small fermenters without spigots. I might pick up one of the plastic Little Big Mouth Bubblers to add to my collection (for a while they were not selling the plastic version).
How do you plan to stir priming sugar into the beer in the fermenter you plan to bottle out of without 1) opening the fermenter and exposing to oxygen, thus defeating the purpose and 2) mixing up all your settled yeast, waste, and trub from the bottom of the fermenter back into your beer?

I guess you could individually bottle prime, but that’s more difficult and tends to be less accurate. I guess LODO is not compatible with bottling unless you keg and then counter pressure fill.
 
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I guess you could individually bottle prime, but that’s more difficult and tends to be less accurate.

Yes, I bottle prime. I either use the Domino Dots sugar cubes for 12 oz bottles, or I will individually measure out cane sugar for other size bottles or if I want a higher carbonation level. I have had excellent results with this method. It is a tad more work, but for a gallon or two it goes fast. I am not sure why you would think it would be less accurate. I have a scale that measures out to 0.1 grams.
 
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How do you plan to stir priming sugar into the beer in the fermenter you plan to bottle out of without 1) opening the fermenter and exposing to oxygen, thus defeating the purpose and 2) mixing up all your settled yeast, waste, and trub from the bottom of the fermenter back into your beer?

I guess you could individually bottle prime, but that’s more difficult and tends to be less accurate. I guess LODO is not compatible with bottling unless you keg and then counter pressure fill.


https://www.homebrewtalk.com/threads/individual-bottle-priming-instructions-with-cane-sugar.683687/
works beautifully and solved a lot of my early priming problems. Gallon batches take a few dozen seconds, my usual 3G batch is a few minutes to add the sugar.

But yeah bottling and lodo probably don’t get along very well.
 
and with regard to bottling, people have posted on how they have successfully bottled NEIPAs that they found were good (for them) for 45 - 60 days.

As always, YMMV -- as everyone tastes beer differently.

Hopefully there's plenty of room here at "1 gal brewers unite" for everyone to talk about how they actually brew enjoyable beer - one very small batch at a time.
 
ah bottling - amount of fermentable sugars in the beer at bottling stage varies more than brewing sugar addition variation, eg a level mustard spoon of brewing sugar ( levelled with a straight edge) is as accurate as you can get - even if you had a magic hydrometer accurate to .000001 you could not improve, as hydrometers are inaccurate due to % alcohol in the fermented beer. I just brew, bottle and enjoy....
 
a level mustard spoon of brewing sugar
People report good results using measuring spoons.

People also report good results when weighting the amount of sugar using a (highly accurate) jewelry scale.

One of strengths of the jewelry scale approach is that it's practical to use different amounts of sugar based on the style. I've bottled a "split batch" (either more or less sugar in a couple of bottles) - the differences are noticeable.
 
Priming individual bottles is just the worst way to bottle beer. First you have a sanitation concern. When we batch prime we boil all the sugar in a small amount of water and stir it into the beer in the bottling bucket. When we bottle prime we put raw sugar in every bottle using the same spoon or measure. Second, when we batch prime we make one meaurement. When we bottle prime we make multiple tedious measurements. And hope we’ve done the math right.
 
There are a a couple (maybe more) well known processes for sanitizing bottles that work.

There are a couple (maybe more) well known processes for dosing individual bottles that work.

Did I mention that there appear to be a couple (maybe more) processes for bottling that allow NEIPAs to stay fresh for 45 - 60 days?

No reason to "hope" that these processes work.

Starting out with these processes, one may want to follow the process instructions to a "t" (;)) for best results.
 

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