Hello-
I am a first time brewer, but have worked in commercial alcohol production and sales for years. For a while, I've been in wine distribution. My goal in getting into beer was to get back into the creative part of the alcohol business that I left some time ago. It was the funnest. I enjoy my customers, sure, but I'd rather be around yeast having sex than managers, I guess. Since I don't have several million to buy a winery in one of the hot appellations of the world, my focus turns to beer, which I love on the same level as any top quality alcohol product.
I thought I'd post on the goals of my new brewery (first 15 gal in the chamber brewed on Monday) which isn't even totally completed yet, rather than iterate my desires to understand if I can go professional on my own once I know what I'm doing. However, that was the impetus for my purchase decisions, so, either I will end up brewing for a living and have a kickin hot pilot system, or I will have a super sweet rig to brew great beer with for myself and others for the rest of my life. Win, win. (i.e. Not interested in the "see if I like it" phase of this hobby)
Here are the tenets of my brewery:
-Totally Single Person Operation for all tasks
-Extremely Small Footprint for the volume
-Comparatively Large Volume. 1/2 bbl batches. Current capacity is ~250 gal/yr. (not that I will actually be able to get rid of all that beer, but.... cornys are cheap..hehe

)
-Indoors brewing. (Its New York, folks)
-Extremely small footprint (it's important to me)
-As many items that are dual use as possible. (Kind of an OCD thing for me)
-As few parts as possible in fermentation setup (causes you to clean/sanitize the same parts more often- win for sanitation). I use the same tube and fittings to fill the fermenter from the BK as I do to top crop and to bottom harvest as well as fill kegs too.
-Completely Tool-less operation (other than when kegging). Just me, grains, hops, yeast..etc. (you could count me as a tool...

)
-All Stainless, Copper, Plastic, and tubing – no brass
-Exacting temperature control and repeatability throughout process, especially fermentation
-Ease of use and shortened brew day from using automation
-Completely threadless fermentation- only one weld below beer line
-Easy and quick enough to clean/sanitize but thorough. 3 step process- PBW, Steam, and Starsan for the entire fermentation channel.
-Very high level of experimentation afforded:
Current capabilities include- pressurized ferment, top cropping and bottom cropping yeast harvest, as many mash options as possible (single,step.. only decoctions are a no), primary with bottom dump and secondary/second primary/lagering/clearing vessel, ease of line length changing in the keezer for experimenting with carb levels to style, etc.
EDIT: Forgot the most important ones!
-Closed system from kettle to glass. (I can't be expected to keep my living space as clean as I would a brewery all the time)
-As a hobby, it fits into my life and schedule rather than the other way around. (accomplished by automation and small footprint, since it's in my living area).
-As much American made construction as I can.
Some of these ideals I started with, some developed throughout my education from being a part of this forum. Some I have yet to test. My idea for keg filling (3 cornies from a Sanke) has not seen the light on this forum yet (I asked several times) .. so, I hope it works. The theory is sound, but we shall see. I don't want to post about it until I know for sure, but I've definitely got a few untested Cockamamie ideas for doing things. One crazy newb, fo sho.
