michael sullivan
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- Joined
- Jun 7, 2024
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I started brewing back in the 90's. Houston had a great shop - DeFalco's - that I would frequent. That was back when you couldn't find in stores what you could brew. I stayed with it up until about 10 years ago when I slowed my brewing down - doing occasional batches since then. But the garage got full and I had little room or time (or $).
I never went to kegging - buying CO or lines and kegs, had nowhere to keep them, etc. My brewing expereince was boil in a 7.5 gallon SS kettle, mash in a 10g cooler I put a false bottom on, sparge from a 5g cooler - use gravity and muscles. Counter-flow chiller. Ferment in a plastic 7g bucket in the guest bath, then rack to secondary for 2 weeks, then rack - add priming sugar, bottle...
Tedious (a bit). I also got to watch buddies get into brewing and get better toys and make better beer. Not complaining - I got to DRINK that beer.
We've moved. I have room - a big garage, though still plenty of other stuff.
I'll research changes I can make on the 'hot side' (mash/boil), but my main point is to see what I can do on the fermentation/cool side in that HOT garage...
I have a full size fridge all my own for brewing. I am looking to add a CO2 line in there for kegs. BUT I'll need to ferment in there as well... I am thinking of a small power line along with the CO2 line (female in the fridge/male on outside). I can set up an Inkbird (or other brand temp control) outside the fridge.
When I have beer in kegs the fridge is on. If I have a fermentation at the same time, I can plug in a heat blanket inside the fridge and put some insulation around that. That heat blanket would be plugged into the power I've put on the fridge - then to the temp controller.
If I don't have any kegged beer I'll plug the fridge into the thermostat control - the more common set-up for many (with a mini fridge).
My questions are many...
First, is a 30 watt heat blanket and insulation going to cut it against being inside a fridge - or simply no way to keep that in fermentation range? I'm OK turning the fridge temp to its highest setting, but would like to still be able to drink what's kegged.
How concerning is a power source/plug in the fridge?
How do you put you temp probe into the fridge - through the door? Worth it to drill a hole - create some type of 'port'? My guess is where that probe is placed when there's kegged beer and the fridge is ON matters a lot - NOT under the blanket, but against the fermenter, maybe at the base?
Then I get to decide if I continue doing a glass carboy (saves $), or is it worth buying something like a Fermzilla and allowing me to ferment under pressure, faster fermentations (if the cold isn't too much to overcome), eliminate O2 on the beer, punch beer into kegs, etc.
I never went to kegging - buying CO or lines and kegs, had nowhere to keep them, etc. My brewing expereince was boil in a 7.5 gallon SS kettle, mash in a 10g cooler I put a false bottom on, sparge from a 5g cooler - use gravity and muscles. Counter-flow chiller. Ferment in a plastic 7g bucket in the guest bath, then rack to secondary for 2 weeks, then rack - add priming sugar, bottle...
Tedious (a bit). I also got to watch buddies get into brewing and get better toys and make better beer. Not complaining - I got to DRINK that beer.
We've moved. I have room - a big garage, though still plenty of other stuff.
I'll research changes I can make on the 'hot side' (mash/boil), but my main point is to see what I can do on the fermentation/cool side in that HOT garage...
I have a full size fridge all my own for brewing. I am looking to add a CO2 line in there for kegs. BUT I'll need to ferment in there as well... I am thinking of a small power line along with the CO2 line (female in the fridge/male on outside). I can set up an Inkbird (or other brand temp control) outside the fridge.
When I have beer in kegs the fridge is on. If I have a fermentation at the same time, I can plug in a heat blanket inside the fridge and put some insulation around that. That heat blanket would be plugged into the power I've put on the fridge - then to the temp controller.
If I don't have any kegged beer I'll plug the fridge into the thermostat control - the more common set-up for many (with a mini fridge).
My questions are many...
First, is a 30 watt heat blanket and insulation going to cut it against being inside a fridge - or simply no way to keep that in fermentation range? I'm OK turning the fridge temp to its highest setting, but would like to still be able to drink what's kegged.
How concerning is a power source/plug in the fridge?
How do you put you temp probe into the fridge - through the door? Worth it to drill a hole - create some type of 'port'? My guess is where that probe is placed when there's kegged beer and the fridge is ON matters a lot - NOT under the blanket, but against the fermenter, maybe at the base?
Then I get to decide if I continue doing a glass carboy (saves $), or is it worth buying something like a Fermzilla and allowing me to ferment under pressure, faster fermentations (if the cold isn't too much to overcome), eliminate O2 on the beer, punch beer into kegs, etc.