small batches
Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 7:58 pm
by mordantly
im looking for input on 2 or 2.5 gallon vessels aside from carboys that can be used to ferment small batches.. i found a 2 gallon glass cookie jar at wally world that could work, but the lid is more akin to a bucket so it can work as a primary. are there wine jugs larger than 1 gallon in existence?
Re: small batches
Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 8:33 pm
by alan_marks
Check out US Plastics,
www.usplastics.com . They have a wide variety of buckets and carboys in a number of sizes.
hth,
Alan
Re: small batches
Posted: Sun Aug 18, 2013 7:01 pm
by spiderwrangler
mordantly wrote:im looking for input on 2 or 2.5 gallon vessels aside from carboys that can be used to ferment small batches..
Is there a reason you are avoiding carboys and trying to use cookie jars? They do make 3 gal carboys...
Re: small batches
Posted: Sun Aug 18, 2013 10:27 pm
by Ozwald
spiderwrangler wrote:They do make 3 gal carboys...
And they're awesome! My 5g's will be gone long before you can pry my 3g's away from me.
Re: small batches
Posted: Mon Aug 19, 2013 6:38 pm
by dmtaylor
Love the 3-gallon carboys. Just picked up another one. I generally make batches from 1.7 to 2.2 gallons, somewhere in there.
Re: small batches
Posted: Mon Aug 19, 2013 8:20 pm
by mordantly
yeah i know, i just don't like th eidea of $25 for a 3gal carboy!
Re: small batches
Posted: Tue Oct 08, 2013 7:39 pm
by Ozwald
I have 2, 3g carboys & they're the best thing since sliced bread. I am brewing on a 100L system (barely shy of a bbl) so they're mostly for yeast starters, but they fucking rock none the less. Mead test batches, small batches, 12g lager pitches, they're worth it.
Scaling a 1g to 12g isn't hard at all. Watch your specialty malts, scale them slightly less than your base malts. Each one behaves a different way, so there's no set formula but after you do it a few times you get the feel for it & can pretty much nail it on your first try with a little practice. Light crystals you don't want to adjust as much, for example, roast for flavor you dumb down a little more, roast for color you dumb down a bit less. Heavier crystal malts can be a bit more challenging. Personally I found that my first couple of tries I over thought it & was treating my recipes like calculus homework. After that it was a bit more intuitive.
Lock your percentages, adjust the volume, drop all your specialty percentages a couple points, bring base up to fix gravity & tweak away. You'll get it after a handful of attempts. Honestly I have a harder time accounting for differences in equipment than the recipe itself. A bigger MLT doesn't recirc like your smaller one. Your kettle utilization gets thrown off a bit from a 1 to 7 to 30 gallon boil. If you have 2 systems that you're comfortable with, in different sizes, it's an absolute breeze.