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john langley

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Brewing on a gas stove gets my wort boiling, but barely. I am thinking of augmenting the boil by adding an electric heat stick to the pot.

I'm reading that the 1000 watt bucket heaters you can find on Amazon for ~$40 aren't designed to boil and shut off around 180° or so. T or F ?

Is what I'm considering even sensible, anyone ever do it ?


I could use the Hot Rod, but was hoping to stay at 1000 watts..

Would a different choice in BK make a noticeable difference in my boil ? Aluminum ?

Currently using a bayou stainless pot...
 
The bucket heater won't help you-- I tried it years ago and it did not help! I also tried to buy a different type of immersion heater from china, and it worked, but it rusted after 1 batch!
 
You really want to only barely boil. Chemically it will produce a better product.

However, a heat stick will help you get up to temp a lot faster, which is huge!
 
Is brewing in a garage or outside (on a deck perhaps) not possible for you? Propane burners can be found on craigslist or offerup for relatively cheap. I use a camp stove I got from Cabelas (about $80) that is sturdy and gets me to boil very fast, and is efficient on propane. Your other option, if outside/garage brewing is out of your reach, is possibly splitting your boil between two kettles, if they'll fit on your stove; although you will have to do some calculations for hop additions, I think. Greater minds than mine should weigh in here.
 
Why the hard 1000 watts limit?

Was concerned with tripping the breaker.

However, after looking at what else I run on that circuit (Air conditioner, 1560 watts) without any issue I'm not terribly concerned but may stick to 1500 out of an abundance of caution because there is a refrigerator on that circuit.

I run that a/c in the summer months when I brew outdoors on a propane burner, and realize the circuit wouldn't support running both......
 
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I have used a hot rod heat stick for almost 2 years to supplement a natural gas burner and have yet to trip a breaker or its built in GCFI plug.
 
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