Hello,
So I'm hoping you guys could give me some feedback on expanding to 10 gallons batches. I want to do it with my current equipment, minimum changes. Thanks in advance!
MASH
Batch sparging with a 10 gallon cooler with ball valve (pictured) as a mash tun. I don't think anything needs to change for the mash as long as the recipe has ~22 lbs of grain or less.
BOIL
15 Gallon boil kettle (pictured) should be able to handle a 10 gallon boil. I will watch out carefully for boil over. NEEDED UPGRADE: Adding a ball valve so I can empty the kettle with gravity, if not it will be to heavy to manipulate and dump into fermentors.
COOLING
If I haven't made any mistakes in my train of thought, this is the first tricky part. I have a 25' and 50' wort chiller. In the steamy Florida weather, I cool down the ground water using the 25' wort chiller in an ice bath, which then feeds the 50' chiller that goes in the kettle. Like I said, I don't really want to buy new expensive/more involved equipment like a plate chiller. I'm sure the cooling will take a little longer, but I should get out of the danger zone just fine. Any suggestions?
FERMENTATION
The trickiest part. I don't have a 10 gallon fermentor. Right now I have 5 and 6 gallons carboys, and I ferment in a chest freezer with temperature control (Even indoors with AC, fermenting at ambient temperatures in Florida doesn't produce the best results. Getting the chest freezer made the biggest difference in the quality of my brews).
So, can I split the beer into 2 fermentors? How do I make sure that I am pitching an equal yeast count into each fermentor (using liquid yeast with a starter)? I could alternatively use 1 dry yeast package into each fermentor. Regardless, will I get 2 possibly different beers simply because I have 2 separate fermentations?
If there was a cheap 10 gallon fermentor that could fit in the chest freezer that would best. Havent found anything on the market...
Sorry for the long-winded post, but I would really appreciate all of your help. Cheers!
So I'm hoping you guys could give me some feedback on expanding to 10 gallons batches. I want to do it with my current equipment, minimum changes. Thanks in advance!

MASH
Batch sparging with a 10 gallon cooler with ball valve (pictured) as a mash tun. I don't think anything needs to change for the mash as long as the recipe has ~22 lbs of grain or less.
BOIL
15 Gallon boil kettle (pictured) should be able to handle a 10 gallon boil. I will watch out carefully for boil over. NEEDED UPGRADE: Adding a ball valve so I can empty the kettle with gravity, if not it will be to heavy to manipulate and dump into fermentors.
COOLING
If I haven't made any mistakes in my train of thought, this is the first tricky part. I have a 25' and 50' wort chiller. In the steamy Florida weather, I cool down the ground water using the 25' wort chiller in an ice bath, which then feeds the 50' chiller that goes in the kettle. Like I said, I don't really want to buy new expensive/more involved equipment like a plate chiller. I'm sure the cooling will take a little longer, but I should get out of the danger zone just fine. Any suggestions?
FERMENTATION
The trickiest part. I don't have a 10 gallon fermentor. Right now I have 5 and 6 gallons carboys, and I ferment in a chest freezer with temperature control (Even indoors with AC, fermenting at ambient temperatures in Florida doesn't produce the best results. Getting the chest freezer made the biggest difference in the quality of my brews).
So, can I split the beer into 2 fermentors? How do I make sure that I am pitching an equal yeast count into each fermentor (using liquid yeast with a starter)? I could alternatively use 1 dry yeast package into each fermentor. Regardless, will I get 2 possibly different beers simply because I have 2 separate fermentations?
If there was a cheap 10 gallon fermentor that could fit in the chest freezer that would best. Havent found anything on the market...
Sorry for the long-winded post, but I would really appreciate all of your help. Cheers!