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BIAB kettle size

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r4dyce

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Hi there,

I'd like to try BIAB in the 2-3 gallon range in order to keep everything doable in my kitchen. Is there a general rule of thumb for BIAB kettle size? I.e. Is a 6 gallon pot big enough for 3 gallon BIAB?

Thanks!
 
Glad you asked this question because I am in the exact same situation! Looking forward to reading the answers...and your thread gets a free bump to the top of the page :D
 
General rule of thumb is double your batch size for BIAB. I use a 10 gallon with no problems for 5-6 gallon batches.
 
Yeah, 2X batch volume is a good estimate. Up to 3X batch size still works well.

Brew on :mug:
 
I can do a 2 1/2 gallon batch in a 5 gallon pot with average gravity and no sparge. Big beers will be more difficult to fit without adding a sparge step. I just did a 1.055 batch that was 3 gallons by adding a sparge.
 
I'm doing 3 gallon batches in a 21 quart pot with sparge. I brewed the first one last week with little problem. I'll be bottling it on Monday-ish. You could do bigger batches with a medium sized kettle, but be careful not to fill too much or risk boil over. I don't think I would ever try to boil 5 gallons in my 21-quart pot.
 
I can do a 2 1/2 gallon batch in a 5 gallon pot with average gravity and no sparge. Big beers will be more difficult to fit without adding a sparge step. I just did a 1.055 batch that was 3 gallons by adding a sparge.

same here. Most beers will nicely fit the the 5 gallon kettle. On bigger beers, the sparge step is a can of corn and a well worth trade off since the kettle fits into my (warm) oven which is great for holding mash temps.
 
Follow up question: I've found a nice 6 gallon pot on Amazon, coincidentally there seems to be a 7.5 gallon version that's actually a few bucks cheaper for some reason... Any disadvantages to a bigger pot besides size? Kind of figuring I might as well go bigger in case I make bigger batches later but wanted to make sure I wasn't overlooking something.
 
Follow up question: I've found a nice 6 gallon pot on Amazon, coincidentally there seems to be a 7.5 gallon version that's actually a few bucks cheaper for some reason... Any disadvantages to a bigger pot besides size? Kind of figuring I might as well go bigger in case I make bigger batches later but wanted to make sure I wasn't overlooking something.

The more head space you have, the harder it is going to be to maintain mash temps. 7.5 gallon is kind of a bad size. Too big for 2.5 gallon, and too small for 5 gallon.
 
Just did a 5 gal batch with 10.75 lbs of grain in an 8 gal pot today. That was pushing it to its absolute max though.
 
The more head space you have, the harder it is going to be to maintain mash temps. 7.5 gallon is kind of a bad size. Too big for 2.5 gallon, and too small for 5 gallon.

I use a 7.5 gallon pot for 5-5.5 gal batches all the time. I have a good system to keep hot break manageable despite "headspace" less than an inch from the top.

It can be done but it. Is. TIGHT!

I think it's a moot point though because I doubt a pot that size could fit in the oven.
 
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