GammaPoint
Member
Hi all, I've been reading Palmer's book over the past week and am getting a feel for how home brewing works. Yesterday I also went to my local brewstore and checked that out. I'm now trying to decide on a initial starter kit. I found a useful thread on these forums which has been helpful (recommending Northern Brewing, Austin HomeBrew, and Midwest start-up kits), but I have a couple questions about equipment that I was hoping to get a handle on.
1). 6 gallon vs 5 gallon glass/plastic carboys?
Some kits offer 5 gallon carboys and some have 6 gallon carboys. Is the additional space in the 6 gallon carboy nice to have, or does it not really matter and I shouldn't factor it into my decision?
2). I've read here (on 'This vs That' and elsewhere) that glass carboys are difficult to handle. Exactly how difficult are we talking? If you're careful is it not really a problem, or regardless of what you do are you taking a significant risk each time you try to clean/move a full glass carboy? Seems like moving 5 gallons of liquid with a glass carboy that might be slippery might be scary, but I don't have a feel for what that would be like. I'd prefer to play it safe and get Better Bottles, but my fiancee likes the look of glass so I'm trying to see how difficult it would actually be.
3). In terms of a good brew kettle size, is 5 gallons the right size if one is expecting to do partial boils (i.e., making 3 gallons of wort and then adding more water in the fermenter?).
4). Wort chillers. I'm trying to decide if I want a kit which has one or not. Seems like it would be a huge pain to fill up a bathtub with ice each time (not to mention that I'd have to go buy ice so it's not free to do this). So wort chillers seem like a really good idea. Thoughts?
5). Bottling bucket. I see that many of the kits online have a bottling bucket. In 'How-to' videos I've seen other people use 'bottling wands' or whatever they're called. Is having a bottling bucket instead with a spigot much easier to use and should be what I'm looking for?
6). Okay, this question is super n00b, but I'd rather ask anyway. I've read that you can't use commerical bottles because you can't easily cap twist-offs? How do I know if a bottle is twist-off or not?
Will it have threading? All of the commerical beer that I drink (Deschutes, Flying Dogs, etc.) I use a bottle opener anyway (and never try to twist off) and the bottles look the same (so I don't have two different types where I can say 'this' looks different than 'that').
1). 6 gallon vs 5 gallon glass/plastic carboys?
Some kits offer 5 gallon carboys and some have 6 gallon carboys. Is the additional space in the 6 gallon carboy nice to have, or does it not really matter and I shouldn't factor it into my decision?
2). I've read here (on 'This vs That' and elsewhere) that glass carboys are difficult to handle. Exactly how difficult are we talking? If you're careful is it not really a problem, or regardless of what you do are you taking a significant risk each time you try to clean/move a full glass carboy? Seems like moving 5 gallons of liquid with a glass carboy that might be slippery might be scary, but I don't have a feel for what that would be like. I'd prefer to play it safe and get Better Bottles, but my fiancee likes the look of glass so I'm trying to see how difficult it would actually be.
3). In terms of a good brew kettle size, is 5 gallons the right size if one is expecting to do partial boils (i.e., making 3 gallons of wort and then adding more water in the fermenter?).
4). Wort chillers. I'm trying to decide if I want a kit which has one or not. Seems like it would be a huge pain to fill up a bathtub with ice each time (not to mention that I'd have to go buy ice so it's not free to do this). So wort chillers seem like a really good idea. Thoughts?
5). Bottling bucket. I see that many of the kits online have a bottling bucket. In 'How-to' videos I've seen other people use 'bottling wands' or whatever they're called. Is having a bottling bucket instead with a spigot much easier to use and should be what I'm looking for?
6). Okay, this question is super n00b, but I'd rather ask anyway. I've read that you can't use commerical bottles because you can't easily cap twist-offs? How do I know if a bottle is twist-off or not?