I've come across a pretty good deal on a 36 qt stainless steel pot by Bayou Classic and was wondering if anyone had experience with these pots. I see that they are .8 mm thick walls...they don't have the tri-clad bottoms...etc. Also with the thin walls - are they okay to drill and install a stainless steel ball valve? It would probably be weldless. Any economy SS kettle looks to be the same thickness...etc. The reason why I like these over others and even heavy duty ones are the dimesions. It's much more taller than wider unlike other brands. With the IC, I need more vertical capacity...in order to have all the coils covered....otherwise it's a waste...mind as well have an older style IC where the coils sit on the bottom.
After looking at pots for a while now....I'm still torn on getting those with tri-clad bottoms or not. As an avid cook, I know that tri-clad bottoms are good for sauces and such because they slow things down and evenly distribute heat. That ultimately helps in avoiding scorching....HOWEVER - most restuarants use aluminum pots for soups, sauces...etc...and they tend to be the same gauge all over as well but they conduct heat easier. Plus the fact that Blichmann doesn't have a tri-clad bottom and either do breweries...so a single layer of stainless steel should be okay...I don't plan on starting the boil and then leaving it for 50 minutes and come back. I will be tending to it.
The whole ss vs alum still makes me worry that I've decided with SS...but spending $100 upfront sucks.
Let me know your thoughts and opinions...thanks.
After looking at pots for a while now....I'm still torn on getting those with tri-clad bottoms or not. As an avid cook, I know that tri-clad bottoms are good for sauces and such because they slow things down and evenly distribute heat. That ultimately helps in avoiding scorching....HOWEVER - most restuarants use aluminum pots for soups, sauces...etc...and they tend to be the same gauge all over as well but they conduct heat easier. Plus the fact that Blichmann doesn't have a tri-clad bottom and either do breweries...so a single layer of stainless steel should be okay...I don't plan on starting the boil and then leaving it for 50 minutes and come back. I will be tending to it.
The whole ss vs alum still makes me worry that I've decided with SS...but spending $100 upfront sucks.
Let me know your thoughts and opinions...thanks.