I've often wondered if the freezing makes the seal on the bucket brittle, but I've never had an infection. I use a lid that has no airlock for the freeze.
I have to disagree with this assertion, as the Blichmann Therminator plate chiller can (with source water at 58 deg. F or below) cool from boiling to 68 deg. F at a rate of two gallons per minute (according to Blichmann's technical specs). A less expensive plate chiller such as a 10-plate Shirron can generally cool 5 gallons from boiling to 68 deg. F in about eight minutes (again, with sufficiently cool counterflow water).
True, plate chillers are quite expensive - even a cheap one is about US$100 - and requires considerable work to keep clean and sanitized, but they do work very quickly.
yeah, I'm in Canada. but that is -30 Celsius, around a balmy -22F...Um, so those who take the beer outside to cool... do you only brew in winter? Anyway, not really an option to us coastal Californians.
Walter Whites Batch, was that a *negative* 30?
I've been kicking around the idea of freezing a couple bottles of purified bottled water in the freezer the night before. Then pulling them out, cutting away the bottle and tossing in the frozen ice into the wort.
For extract brewing, what about sanitizing some plastic tupperware (sandwich size), filling them 3/4 full with the water you intend to use for topping up (in my case brita water from tap) and freezing them over night. Then when you have to chill and top up the wort, just open the tupperware and toss the ice blocks in to cool it?
Are there problems with this method? It's the same water you'd use to top up, the inside of the container is sterilized and water isn't exposed to the outside until you toss it in the wort.
Possibly and only possibly, extracting the ice from the bags might be tricky if the ice doesn't want to be co-operative. But you could spritz the frozen bags with sanitizer and toss them in.
Sorry, I meant plastic containers to make ice blocks. Ones like this:
![]()
It is simple physics. Nothing will be faster than ice.
Has anyone ever used dry ice? Seems sanitary, would cool things quickly, and also provide a CO2 purge.
Just wondering...
It is simple physics. Nothing will be faster than ice.
1.....Using a wort chiller you must use a liquid WARMER than ice
2.....When you are using a chiller there is NO DIRECT contact with the wort.
Therefore there must be a loss due to imperfect thermal conductivity.
We all know every material has a different TC. Stainless is much less than copper for example.
Lastly a lot of kits need make up water so why not use ice?
It works but you will not convince many here. Of course those are the same guys who used to say YOU MUST SECONDARY your beer and if you don't your an idiot
But what do those wine chillers use. I was always under the (maybe incorrect) impression is was some low freezing liquid like freeon or amonia. Do they make those extra large for homebrew size. Why not and how expensive would that be? (Utterly out of my price range, of course, but I'm talking theoreticals ant this point.