Cavpilot2000
Well-Known Member
I was using my better bottles for secondary and dry hopping but im considerig using those for fermenting ales indoors. Then i could do double 11 gallon batches and split them into ales and lagers thereby creating 4 unique beers in a single brew day.
Cool idea!
I will say there is a downside to primary fermentation in cornys, and that is the lack of extra space. In my brewbucket, I usually put 6 gallons in, expecting to leave behind yeast and other sediment but still get a full 5 gallons into the serving keg.
Doing primary in a corny gives you 5 gallons and a small amount of headspace (most cornys actually hold about 5 gallons plus a quart or two), but by the time you lose volume to yeast, sediment, and possibly blowoff for ales, you are looking at only about 4.25-4.5 gal in the final keg, if that.
6 gallon cornys are the ideal answer, but they are rare and NOT cheap.