Want to place an ad email luke@realbeer.co.nz
$50+GST / month
I'm on the lookout for a brew kettle and wort chiller and could use a bit of advice.
I brew from extract, and have never bothered boiling the wort with some good results and only ever one total write-off. However I have decided to start boiling up so will need a kettle and chiller.
Now I usually brew in batches of 20-25L. How big a kettle will I need? I've seen 35L ones available, would this be OK?
I also plan to brew all-grain eventually (when the girlfriend thinks it's a good use of renovation funds) - would a 35L pot be OK for that too?
The ones I've seen do not have taps, I have thought about investing in a pump eventually so I would need to do that I guess.
The pots I've seen (35L stainless) are $150 from various homebrew shops. This seems like a fair bit, can anyone suggest a cheaper source or do I just have to suck it up and pay that?
Lastly, a wort chilller - I realise it's possible to make your own, but does anyone know where I can get a commercial one? Just want to compare prices.
Tags:
In Auckland, there's an Asian kitchen engineering place in New North Rd, Mt Albert (just past the Mt Albert shops on the right hand side) that sells 35 litre pots for $75. They are certainly not the thickest but suit the purpose well and come with a lid.
I think they go right up to several hundred litres. I got the next size up though (think it's 50 litre) and have never regretted it - just makes it easier when you are doing boils because you have that much extra headroom to cope with boil-ups so that they don't become boil-overs.
I did get nipples welded to both my boil pot and to my HLT but I reckon you won't need them until you get serious about AG, march pumps and a single tier arrangement. Until then I'd just wait as you can always add them later.
As far as a wort chiller goes, just hook yourself up with some of that copper airconditioning coil you can get off trademe (from brass123 I think) and coil it around a paint bucket - if you need to do tight bends get a proper pipe bender or just flood the coil with cold water and freeze it solid before bending it - it prevents it from kinking. I just forced a couple of lengths of garden hose on each end, added clamps and plastic garden hose quick connects and you're away - prob cost around $70.00.
For immersion chillers, what's the preferred diameter for the copper?
20mm
12.5mm etcI got a 36L one second hand of TradeMe, it was a good deal and I had to wait to find it, but now I do wish it was bigger.
I think 40L should be an absolute minimum (try to get exact inside measurements because mine was advertised as a 40L) but as Druid said, 50L sounds like the way to go
Thanks guys, will go 50L.
Druid do you happen to know the name of the engineering outfit? Thought I might give them a call, that's about half the price as I've seen them in homebrew shops.
Hi Chris,
I have a second homemade counterflow chiller if you are interested. I made one for myself but bought too much copper so made two. the one I use works great but you would need drill a hole in the side of your pot and fit a tap (you may need to do this anyway unless you intend on syphoning the wort to your fermenter). If your interested send me a PM and I'll find a photo.
Cheers
Hi Ralph,
It is exactly like that, I also fitted a small 12v pump at the bottom to speed it up as gravity was a tad slow. I will try to get a pic up tonight.
Sweet setup! I like your Kettle!!
Can you tell me what OD of copper you used and about what length? I think I will build something like this.
Was just going to use a gravity feed, but in case I have the kettle down low I am interested where to source a little 12V pump from as well.
Thanks for the pictures!
© 2024 Created by nzbrewer. Powered by