ancientmariner52
Well-Known Member
That will work too. However you do it, indoor or out, rig a big-a$$ sink at a comfortable working height. Your back and beer will be better for it.
The upgrade issue, as I see it, is that very few of us really know where we will end up with our brewing style which means we don't know what our equipment should look like from the start.
Take DCPCooks for example. He and I exchange from time to time, and he just moved into a new home giving him a wide open basement (blank canvas) to build into a brewery. He is adding high amp electrical service, vented hoods, water lines and cutting drains into the concrete floor. Can he imagine he would be doing this some years ago when he was boiling 3G of water on his kitchen stove for an extract kit?
Many novices go to a LHBS and get sold on a kit that has most of the starter sized items....say a small boil kettle for extract, perhaps. With some experience, that brewer may now do AG and that small extract sized kettle is sitting there. But unless he/she is clairvoyant, their brewing future is generally a huge question mark at the beginning.
Any number of folks have mentioned to me they want to try home brewing. I always suggest they come over to join me for a brew day or to find a local brew club to join. Most of the guesswork or unknown is removed by observation and that person can avoid purchasing items that have little value in a brew or two down the road.
the only thing I haven't upgraded is my long-handled spoon.![]()
Lame old spoon.![]()
Yeah, it's bothering me. There must be a better version, perhaps one with a hinge in the middle for easier storage, or some sort of automatic stirring function....
....wait a sec....automatic stirring function....isn't that what upgrading to a whirlpooling setup would accomplish?
Nah, you need an automated drone droid for that.
Anybody want to buy a spoon?
I don't know if this counts as an upgrade, since I can't imagine keeping house without one. An air compressor.
Dry the insides of your chiller. Blow the last hull bits off your mash tun manifold. Push a piece of yarn through five feet of beer tube to really scrub the inside.Get ALL the grain dust out of your mill.
I've spent my life in machine shops and engine rooms, and not having compressed air is like not having electricity or indoor plumbing. But it might not be so obvious if you don't come from a mechanical background.
Most people seem to want to go to larger systems but I wish I wouldve planned small batches from the start. I have lots of stuff for 5 gallons batches but it takes me a long time to drink that much beer. I want more variety. A couple weeks ago I did my first BIAB - a small 1.5 gallon batch (no sparge) and it was a very enjoyable process. I think I will continue down that route, probably increasing to 2-ish gallon batches now that I have a 3 gallon carboy. I still have a couple of extract kits that I will cut to half batches and then move on to BIAB, probably going electric eventually.
5. BOOKS!!!!! recipe books and just over all information books on brewing. i have the how to brew book but my mind thirst for more.
This a great topic! Many have said that they wish they purchased the best they could afford from day one...
This seems like a good spot for this newb question-
What should I purchase? (& more importantly why)
Hellfire burner $150 (& stand)
Amcyl 15 gallon brew kettle w/ weldless thermometer & ball valve $190 (or other kettle?)
Total $340
Or
Bayou classic burner ~$60
10 gallon ss pot ~$60
Total $120
Im new to home brewing & want to move to all grain.
Ultimately I will want the ability to produce 10 gallon batches but have no need to do that today.
The cheap solution will be my next step but the better option will probably be my final kettle & burner..?
Worst case if I never get the hang of brewing all grain & only brew a few batches I should be able to sell the good stuff for $250? Right?
Where the cheap stuff will probably get $20 maybe $40? So the loss of $s will be comparable...?
Any advise & guidance for this newb would much appreciated. Thanks!
I did a bit of searching but didn't find a topic specific to my question. What upgrades to your equipment have you done, that you wish you had done from day 1 which would have saved money, headaches, and provided a much better beer? This is a very open ended question and am wondering if you wish you had gone BIAB/all grain or maybe electric from the start. Maybe getting a fermentation chamber made a huge change in the quality of your beer. Maybe it's as simple as getting a better quality burner, pot, or thermometer. Just curious to hear what you think would have been beneficial from day 1.
With that question out of the way, a little background as to why I ask. In my younger days I was into working on cars. Spent money on a supercharged car. converted it to turbo with a kit. started upgrading pieces. swapped out motors. and eventually wound up with a fully custom setup with programmable ecu. by the end, you realize you could have saved more than a few dollars having jumped right in, but maybe needed the experience of the smaller setups to get there. However along the way you realize that if you had the right tools for the jobs sooner, life would have been so much easier.
A hose bib on the back wall of my attached garage. In autumn, I shut off the two outside hose bibs, because, well, it's Minnesota. And those bibs weren't very close to the garage, anyway. So, no outside running water between October and April. Since my utility room is just behind the garage back wall, it was a cinch to run 1/2" copper to a freezeless hose bib through the wall.
And in summer, I have a closer water source for washing cars in the driveway.
i tried to do this when i built my house. builder said no. might do it and add a cut off in the basement and drain the line....
I did a bit of searching but didn't find a topic specific to my question. What upgrades to your equipment have you done, that you wish you had done from day 1 which would have saved money, headaches, and provided a much better beer? This is a very open ended question and am wondering if you wish you had gone BIAB/all grain or maybe electric from the start. Maybe getting a fermentation chamber made a huge change in the quality of your beer. Maybe it's as simple as getting a better quality burner, pot, or thermometer. Just curious to hear what you think would have been beneficial from day 1.
With that question out of the way, a little background as to why I ask. In my younger days I was into working on cars. Spent money on a supercharged car. converted it to turbo with a kit. started upgrading pieces. swapped out motors. and eventually wound up with a fully custom setup with programmable ecu. by the end, you realize you could have saved more than a few dollars having jumped right in, but maybe needed the experience of the smaller setups to get there. However along the way you realize that if you had the right tools for the jobs sooner, life would have been so much easier.
That's how I did it. Ran 1/2" copper with a shutoff valve on the inside. Connected to a freezeless bib through the back wall of the garage. Took about an hour to install.
A grain mill. I procrastinated way too many years paying twice as much as I could have for base malts.