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@unviewtiful
I still have to try Costco. I don't know that my local one has propane refill, but I'll check. Every other place near me is generally in the ~$4 per gallon range PLUS $5 for the fill itself (the heck!?!). Makes it around $21 for 19-20lbs in your tank versus about $17-18 for a tank exchange. Still slightly cheaper per pound of propane, but not by a lot and the couple of places that do fills are a lot less convenient than any of the dozen places near me that swap tanks.
 
I have a 100 gallon propane tank behind my house. Its only use is for my in-ground spa. At one time I thought about running copper line and installing another regulator and using that tank for brewing. I get the gas really cheap and they come and refill it for me occasionally. Wonder if anyone has done this?
 
@passedpawn...you can run other appliances off of that tank (grill, turkey fryer, etc), but I think they all have to be made stationary.
Of course you can probably the plumbing detachable, but I don't know what the legality of that is, strictly speaking.
 
@azazel1024.... One thing you have to watch is how much propane you are getting. The Home Depot fills are only 15 pounds!!! I go to a local gas company, Irish Carbonic and Propane, for both CO2 and Propane. Their propane fills are 20 pounds for $21.75. Tanks now have a safety shut off when a tank is filled to full. Irish pumps it in until it stops by itself.
 
My LHBS said they wouldn't care if I brought my base grain in to use their mill while buying and milling specialty grains. Maybe yours will let you too?
 
Great article! Love the pool idea, is that a valid reason to get a pool? I think so!
Kidding aside there is no substitute for research and DIY in equipment for making beer. And also knowing what you want for your end "set up." I knew I wanted to brew all grain so from the beginning I did, I never brewed with extract. I collected equipment for just over a year. 95% was bought on sale. I went HD igloo with my MT and HLT. I bought the fittings, false bottom on sale and put them together. It cost me about 100 for my false bottom mash tun, I saved at least $50. Even as a DIY'er I easily have $1500 in gear... yeah I know! But that includes some big ticket items like my keezer (new freezer, 4 Perlick 630SS faucets), a gear driven malt mill and 8 ball locks. Most all (not the mill) was on sale.
Bottom line is that the beers I like to drink cost $12.99 a six pack and up. Going out you are lucky if you can find one on tap and even a decent beer on tap is 6 bucks now. So when you do the math you can break even in your first summer. Yeah I know!!!
 
Completely enjoyed this article! I have only brewed once and am gearing up (literally!) to brew my second time. This article was interesting and entertaining! Thank you!
 
Good article. I have friends who like to make these crazy beers at like 8-12%, with all kinds of ingredients...runs the all grain cost to over $50 for two cases. I like to do brews under $30 per 5 gal. Of course, doing a higher alcohol beer or a beer that needs a specialty yeast increases your cost. I almost always use dry yeast, as it is way cheaper than the vials/smak paks (again, unless doing a funky beer).
And harversting the yeast sludge at the bottom is the cheapest, but subsequent yeast pitchings will reduce the activity of the yeast (you won;t get as much attenuation as when originally pitched), plus you have to worry about off-flavors and the occasionally infection.
I wish I lived near you. I have two LHBS near me, and it;s highway robbery what they charge for a 50# sack of 2 row - $68! I can get it online, with shipping, for $54. Plus, I don't loose an hour driving, don't have to pay two tolls, and don;t use gas (better for the environment).
 
Want free ice in large quantities? Try your local arena. The Zamboni usually dumps ice shavings in a pile by the back door... Just back your pick-up over and shovel in!
 
Well done, I do many of these as well. Switching to All-grain is the biggest savings for sure!
 
@ChrisfromAbby
I don't know how "sanitary" that ice is! Ever watch a hockey game with all the spitting, blowing the nose and the occasional blood? That all stays on the surface and gets shaved off.
 
You all probably already know and do this. Home Depot sells water in five gallon plastic carboys for about $13 including the deposit on the carboy. Just keep it.
 
Excellent article, thank you for your hard work. I'm curious about your comment that electric is the cheapest heat energy source. I wondered if you have done some comparative number crunching (electric vs propane vs natural gas vs firewood vs whatever) to convince yourself. I don't have enough technical info or expertise to figure out how to do that (make some realistic calculations), so far. I'm about to upgrade my brewery size-wise, moving from electric stove boiling 3 to 4 gallons, to a big brew pot in which I'll be boiling probably 15 gallons plus. I just assumed I'd have to use a propane stove out on the porch. If electric would be cheaper, and if I can get a hold of some kind of immersible, powerful electric element maybe I should consider that. If you have any comments, please share.
thanks again for the article, cheers
 
Great article full of great advice and entertaining stories. Love the food coloring for the star san. No problems with it staining?
 

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