I started brewing in a dorm room. I had to use a hot plate and brew in the bathroom. the whole building would complain.
Uno mas apartment brewer. Of course I have only 2 batches under my belt but I am lucky because I have a laundry room that stays at 68 in my apartment. Also the old people that live below me have left me alone. At first I think it was because I was the tattooed freak upstairs.. Now its because I helped them grill their steaks when it was real cold out the other day.
Considering some of the disgusting smells I've come across in the hallways, I can't see brewing causing much of a stir.I'm curious to find out how many people get complaints about the smell. I'm renting a house now but due to money I'll probably move to an apartment soon. I'm worried about smell complaints.
I found a larger Rubbermaid tote works great to keep the primary fermenter in and large plastic trash bags over beer cases for the bottles (in the off chance I end up making some grenades!).one hard earned piece of advice from an apartment brewer: hardwood floors get damaged by liquid really easily. even if you think the risk of spill is low use a tarp!
That's awesome; sounds like fun! I wish I had started brewing when I was an undergrad in the dorms.I started brewing in a dorm room. I had to use a hot plate and brew in the bathroom. the whole building would complain.
I did my undergrad at UW-Madison. I never brewed then, but we liked to grill out often. We kept a large, sealable Rubbermaid tote on our balcony. It was just large enough to fit a small Webber grill, charcoal, etc. We'd store the grill (once it was cold of course) in the tote and take it out when we grilled. I figured the fire marshal wasn't going to be working after 4 pm or on weekends, so those were great times to grill!I'm currently a student in Madison, WI. This city has some pretty strict open flame laws so I need to do all my brewing on my girlfriend's electric stove.
I'm running into the same problems. My apartment stays at about 80 ˚F during the dead of Winter if I don't open my patio door. During the Summer it can get over 100 ˚F here in Nebraska, and as a grad student I really can't afford to keep the AC running that cold.not a problem now, but I live on the mid level of my building and it gets a little toasty during summer, is there an efficient way to keep the wort cool during fermentation when it gets too hot?
I'm running into the same problems. My apartment stays at about 80 ˚F during the dead of Winter if I don't open my patio door. During the Summer it can get over 100 ˚F here in Nebraska, and as a grad student I really can't afford to keep the AC running that cold.
Not only am I an apartment brewer, but as a college student I have 3 other roommates who get mad when I make my wort,
The only downside is that my brew kettle has some marks where the coils were. Does anyone know of a remedy for this problem?
I have a nice gas stove which can easily get 6 gallons to a nice rolling boil, so I'm happy for that. I am slightly less happy about the temperature situation in my apartment. All through the winter it was a struggle to keep my apartment below 80. Sounds strange, but my apartment is old and uses those steam-radiator things for heat. Even with the valves fully shut they still get pretty hot, and I also have pipes running through the apartment delivering steam to the upper floors for their heat. Those pipes also get hot.
Opening the windows cooled things down, but technically it isn't allowed during the winter and it led to wild temperature swings. I don't have a swamp cooler yet, but I think I'll need to get one soon. None of the beers I made in winter turned out that great, especially the one I made with Nottingham. That one tastes like a regular beer that got filtered through old tires.