Champurrado
Well-Known Member
I see these pricy fermenters on brewing supply web sites and was just wondering, what's the benefit and how do they work?
Thanks.
Thanks.
So... its like a standard fermenter except you can remove the yeast and part of your brew (inadvertently) and then just let it "age" in the primary until bottling/kegging?
Seems a little wasteful to me. But then again, look at my post count. What do I know.
for homebrewers it really doesnt do much other than save a bit of time racking to secondary and cleaning. however in commercial breweries this time savings is big. also in commercial breweries when dealing with large batches yeast autolysis becomes a problem due to the volume and the reuse of yeast. also since they do reuse the yeast they dont want to have to wait till the beer is done fermenting to get the yeast back to work. so being able to remove the yeast is important.
so really in homebrewing its like owning a lexus. its really just an over priced toyota![]()
You can make excellent beer with a conical; JZ has at least one from MoreBeer. But just as many brewers make excellent beer with buckets and carboys. For my money, it's a shiny toy. It's not a magic wand to make better beer. I'd love to have a couple jacketed conicals in my home brewery! But I sincerely doubt that'll ever happen.
Bob
Nit noted. Didn't know that!
JamilZ said:I use glass carboys for all batches except when I need to do a 10 gallon batch. Then I use a conical because it holds 10 gallons.
I do not do "secondary" either. Most of the folks describe my process correctly, but it has nothing to do with conicals. I let the beer sit on the yeast until everything fermentation/yeast related is complete. Then the beer gets kegged and carbonated. I don't use a racking cane. I just use a length of tubing and I don't have any trouble getting the beer off the yeast.
Last edited by jamilz on Sat Sep 02, 2006 5:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I have a 6.5 gallon MiniBrew conical and love the thing, but if you wait too long it can be a pain getting the trub to drop out the bottom.
The trub gets all packed in the bottom and won't loosen up until you turn your back. Then it all comes out, overflowing your container, along with with a pint or two of good beer.
But, I do love being able to take samples and readings from the little valve higher up.
And, it impresses people who don't know anything about brewing.