QuercusMax
Well-Known Member
I will freely admit to being an evangelistic BIAB'er. I've been a casual homebrewers since '05, doing partial boil extract+specialty grains batches. I had read about doing all-grain, but it seemed really intimidating - having to build things, worry about batch vs fly sparging, stuck mashes, insulation, etc. I really liked brewing, and bought 33lb jugs of LME to do my batches.
Then I read about BIAB, watched some YouTube videos, and decided to give it a try. Bought myself a paint strainer bag and brewed a 3 gallon full boil batch of the Session Saison I found on here. It was awesome! Ended up the best brew I had ever made out of 32 batches up to they point! And it was SO EASY and cheap.
For me, 3 gallon BIAB is the best way to get into all grain. You don't need any extra equipment ( although I bought a $25 refractometer after my second BIAB because using a hydrometer is such a PITA ).
I've since invested in a 7.5 gallon ported kettle, but aside from that and a cheap $20 corona mill I have made no more equipment purchases over my original kit I bought 8 years ago. I've bought some extra 5 gallon buckets, but I'm still using all my original kit.
I may at some point upgrade to a "real" all grain system, but honestly, I
don't see any pressing reason why. I get 80% efficiency, and I can mash 10 pounds of grain easily, so I either make 5 gallons of 1.050ish brews, or supplement with extract or make a 3 or 4 gallon batch.
So sorry if I'm one of the evangelical BIAB'ers, but that's my story. Going all-grain is scary, and if you have to make a big equipment outlay in terms of time/money (my LHBS sells a mash tun kit for $150!), it's quite intimidating. With a 3 gallon AG batch, the extra equipment plus ingredients were CHEAPER than an extract kit! You can't beat that! And like RM-MN said, it is quick, too. I've done multiple double brew days in under 6 hours. If I prep everything ahead of time I'll be done in 3.5 hours.
Then I read about BIAB, watched some YouTube videos, and decided to give it a try. Bought myself a paint strainer bag and brewed a 3 gallon full boil batch of the Session Saison I found on here. It was awesome! Ended up the best brew I had ever made out of 32 batches up to they point! And it was SO EASY and cheap.
For me, 3 gallon BIAB is the best way to get into all grain. You don't need any extra equipment ( although I bought a $25 refractometer after my second BIAB because using a hydrometer is such a PITA ).
I've since invested in a 7.5 gallon ported kettle, but aside from that and a cheap $20 corona mill I have made no more equipment purchases over my original kit I bought 8 years ago. I've bought some extra 5 gallon buckets, but I'm still using all my original kit.
I may at some point upgrade to a "real" all grain system, but honestly, I
don't see any pressing reason why. I get 80% efficiency, and I can mash 10 pounds of grain easily, so I either make 5 gallons of 1.050ish brews, or supplement with extract or make a 3 or 4 gallon batch.
So sorry if I'm one of the evangelical BIAB'ers, but that's my story. Going all-grain is scary, and if you have to make a big equipment outlay in terms of time/money (my LHBS sells a mash tun kit for $150!), it's quite intimidating. With a 3 gallon AG batch, the extra equipment plus ingredients were CHEAPER than an extract kit! You can't beat that! And like RM-MN said, it is quick, too. I've done multiple double brew days in under 6 hours. If I prep everything ahead of time I'll be done in 3.5 hours.