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What is your favorite piece of equipement that makes brew day easier??

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GroosBrewz

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The reason I posted is this is because for ten years I have brewed beer... And for ten years, I shunned siphon-starters.. I always said "Hell, thats just a piece of fancy equipment and waste of money".. Then I got one for my Christmas one year and OMG!! It made my life so much easier.. Ridiculously easier.. I couldn't believe that for TEN FRIGGING YEARS I struggled trying to start a siphon with turkey basters, etc on countless batches of brew..... And it was only 10 bucks.. Geeze..

Anyway, that got me to thinking.. Anyone else out there ever have an epiphany with a new piece of equipment that now you cant live without??
 
a burner. Hard to keep a boil going just sitting it out in the sun.


Oh, and a kegging setup. I'm brewing (and drinking) twice as much now.
 
I have yet to put a spigot on my kettle, but I imagine that would make things so much easier. +1 on the autosiphon, but I melted mine and have not replaced it yet. I built a T device to siphon with my mouth, but still not quite as awsum as a properly-working autosiphon IMO.
 
My brew stand. :D

DSCN3837.JPG
 
:off:
As an AG brewer, the refractometer is the single most valuable piece of kit in my brewery.

Hey Fly,
I myself bought a refractometer several months ago and have yet to see the value.. I thought it would be nice to get a gravity reading without taking huge samples, but from what I understand,for an OG sample, it only works in conjunction with a hydrometer reading anyway, so if I have to take the hydrometer anyway, whats the point? Where and how do you use it? Isn't it inconvenient to use a chart/beersmith to transform the brix into gravity?

:mug:
 
You just need your O.G. in S.G. I use my O.G. as converted from my refractometer.

I probably take 20 readings throughout brewday and check gravity every other day during fermentation. I have a much better idea of how my brew is doing because of the refractometer.
 
I love my new vinator and bottle sprayer. They hacked 2-3 hours off my bottling day. Used to be I would siphon oxyclean into bottles, scrub them with the bottle brush, dump, siphon rinse water in three times, dump, then siphon in starsan, shake, dump, wait to dry.

Now I give my bottles a good blast with hot tap water and squirt them with starsan in the vinator and they're good to go. Best investment yet.
 
My coffee pot. Second would probably be my kegs as I hate bottling too.

The guy with the Groo avatar said:
Hey Fly,
I myself bought a refractometer several months ago and have yet to see the value.. I thought it would be nice to get a gravity reading without taking huge samples, but from what I understand,for an OG sample, it only works in conjunction with a hydrometer reading anyway, so if I have to take the hydrometer anyway, whats the point? Where and how do you use it?

I use it for all pre-boil readings. I still use a hydrometer for OG/FG.
 
:off:

Hey Fly,
I myself bought a refractometer several months ago and have yet to see the value.. I thought it would be nice to get a gravity reading without taking huge samples, but from what I understand,for an OG sample, it only works in conjunction with a hydrometer reading anyway, so if I have to take the hydrometer anyway, whats the point? Where and how do you use it? Isn't it inconvenient to use a chart/beersmith to transform the brix into gravity?

:mug:

A refractometer, once calibrated, works independently of the hydrometer. A few drops on the glass will adjust to temperature nearly instantaneously and give a reading. SG x 4 = Brix, approximately, and is a nice easy conversion factor to remember.

You can even use a refractometer during/after fermentation, but you need to adjust for the alcohol in solution. There is an excellent spreadsheet linked on MoreBeer that does this.
 
My grain crusher. No, wait, my AG set-up. No, wait, my boil kettle.
No, my CFC. Wait, it's the fermenting temp control system. Ahh wait - I GOT it!!!
it's my Kegerator (but only when full!)
 
There's been a few. In the past, at different levels of brewing, I'd have said the bottling tree, then it was the kegerator (buh-bye bottling tree). Then the auto siphon. Then the refractometer.

But the ultimate, most important time/back saver has been the pump. Brewing became so much easier and smoother.:mug:
 
My no chill fermentor.

No dragging hoses
No cleaning the coils
No waiting for the wort to chill before I can get things cleaned up
Less mess

ProMash.

It is all linked together, no need to enter anything more than once, calculations carry over to all of the other utilities automatically.

Refractometer.

Holy cow, I dont know what I did without it... great tool, great toy.
 
A refractometer, once calibrated, works independently of the hydrometer. A few drops on the glass will adjust to temperature nearly instantaneously and give a reading. SG x 4 = Brix, approximately, and is a nice easy conversion factor to remember.

You can even use a refractometer during/after fermentation, but you need to adjust for the alcohol in solution. There is an excellent spreadsheet linked on MoreBeer that does this.

ProMash does this automatically too. Maybe most brewing applications do too, you can enter your OG and FG in either SG or Brix, it compensates for alcohol.
 
Brewday?... probably Beersmith (if that's equipment). If not it would probably be my garden hose (safe water/chem free).

Any other day and it's the Kegorator. That thing makes being a homebrewer soooooo easy.
 
Our basement. Nothing was possible until we moved into a place with that precious space.

Kit-wise, ever since I rigged up a solid stand for my grain mill I've enjoyed cranking that handle - I like the sound and smell of the fresh grain getting crushed at the start of brewday.
 

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