MyQul
Chairman of the Bored
I've never had any fermetation control as I don't have room for either a brewfridge or fermentation chamber so when I saw the fermentation bag I thought it would be the perfect solution for me. So after reading all the positive reviews on Amazon and morebeer I decided to buy one from morebeer.com
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B008EKD7CQ/?tag=skimlinks_replacement-20
http://www.morebeer.com/products/cool-brewing-insulated-fermentation-bag.html
First off let me say this thing is HUGE. The dimensions are approx 21"x 26". My Youngs FV and a blow off rig plus 2L pop bottle (more of ths in a bit) fit into it easily. I I could probably fit my Coopers FV (which is about 33L) complete with with krausen collar. In fact I think you can get a 60L FV in there.
Onto the main thing does it do what it says on the tin? The Cool brewing site says:
After pitching the yeast I put the 2L ice bottle in the bag with the FV. The following morning I checked and the temp had duly reached to about 20C. I swapped ice bottles out every 12 hours or so and the bag did indeed maintain a steady temp of about 20C. It been doing that now for four days.
There is a small fluctuation of about 0.5C The lowest it has got is 19.5C (fluctuating from 20C) and the highest is about 20.5C (again fluctuating from 20C), so an overall variation of 1C. Not as good an electronically contolled brewfridge or fermentaion chamber but I can definatley live with that - pretty good for such a low tech solution
I've yet to test the limits of how long you can leave it, the longest I've left it so far is 14 hours with no problems. The cool brewing website says, "A frozen 2-liter bottle typically does not thaw completely in 24 hours so it is easy to maintain a constant temperature drop." After 12-14 hours the 2L bottle has only thawed about 1/2 so I can well believe you could leave it for 24hrs without problem.
The bag itself is made out of some sort of man made material like nylon and feels very sturdy and the inner lining is made out of a vynl material again it feels sturdy. The lining is also obviously water proof as the frozen water bottle 'sweats' and leaves pools of water in the bottlom of the bag but the water hasn't leaked out of the bag and onto the kitchen work surface. If the bottles sweating bothers you the bag is certainly big enough to put a large tray or trug in the bottom and put the FV and water bottles in that to collect the water
Some of the reviews on Amazon complained of the zip breaking and the lining ripping but I understand there is a second version of the bag and I'm pretty sure that is the one I have as everything feels pretty robust.
Now the negatives:
The one big downside is cost. For me to import it into the UK the costs were hideous. For the bag itself plus shipping cost (which was roughly half the cost of the bag :shock:) it was ��ã88.86. I then had an import tax charge on top of that of approx ��ã21. So it cost me in total about ��ã110. If there was a UK distributor I think the bag would probably cost about ��ã40
So is it worth it. I think yes. I continually read, consistant fermentaion temps are one of the best things you can do for your brew and as far as function goes this definatley does what it advertises it can do. Without the bag I am unable to use liquid yeast as my brew corner even in the middle of winter is warmer than recommended fermentation temps and this doesn't take into account the added extra temp from the exothermic reaction created during fermentation.
The real test will come during summer but I think the bag will be able to handle it. Cool Brewing claims the bag is able to lower the temp up to 16C lower than ambient with enough ice bottles. T hat being so I think you would even be able to lager using it and I might even have a go.
So overall I give it 4 out of 5. One star less because it's so expensive to import
Being a luddite I don't have a smart phone or digital camera so I've posted some photo's from the web
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B008EKD7CQ/?tag=skimlinks_replacement-20
http://www.morebeer.com/products/cool-brewing-insulated-fermentation-bag.html
First off let me say this thing is HUGE. The dimensions are approx 21"x 26". My Youngs FV and a blow off rig plus 2L pop bottle (more of ths in a bit) fit into it easily. I I could probably fit my Coopers FV (which is about 33L) complete with with krausen collar. In fact I think you can get a 60L FV in there.
Onto the main thing does it do what it says on the tin? The Cool brewing site says:
- One frozen 1-liter bottle will result in a 2.5 degree F drop below room temperature.
- One frozen 2-liter bottle will result in a 5 degree F drop below room temperature.
- This method is scalable all the way up to around a 30 degree F drop below room temperature!
After pitching the yeast I put the 2L ice bottle in the bag with the FV. The following morning I checked and the temp had duly reached to about 20C. I swapped ice bottles out every 12 hours or so and the bag did indeed maintain a steady temp of about 20C. It been doing that now for four days.
There is a small fluctuation of about 0.5C The lowest it has got is 19.5C (fluctuating from 20C) and the highest is about 20.5C (again fluctuating from 20C), so an overall variation of 1C. Not as good an electronically contolled brewfridge or fermentaion chamber but I can definatley live with that - pretty good for such a low tech solution
I've yet to test the limits of how long you can leave it, the longest I've left it so far is 14 hours with no problems. The cool brewing website says, "A frozen 2-liter bottle typically does not thaw completely in 24 hours so it is easy to maintain a constant temperature drop." After 12-14 hours the 2L bottle has only thawed about 1/2 so I can well believe you could leave it for 24hrs without problem.
The bag itself is made out of some sort of man made material like nylon and feels very sturdy and the inner lining is made out of a vynl material again it feels sturdy. The lining is also obviously water proof as the frozen water bottle 'sweats' and leaves pools of water in the bottlom of the bag but the water hasn't leaked out of the bag and onto the kitchen work surface. If the bottles sweating bothers you the bag is certainly big enough to put a large tray or trug in the bottom and put the FV and water bottles in that to collect the water
Some of the reviews on Amazon complained of the zip breaking and the lining ripping but I understand there is a second version of the bag and I'm pretty sure that is the one I have as everything feels pretty robust.
Now the negatives:
The one big downside is cost. For me to import it into the UK the costs were hideous. For the bag itself plus shipping cost (which was roughly half the cost of the bag :shock:) it was ��ã88.86. I then had an import tax charge on top of that of approx ��ã21. So it cost me in total about ��ã110. If there was a UK distributor I think the bag would probably cost about ��ã40
So is it worth it. I think yes. I continually read, consistant fermentaion temps are one of the best things you can do for your brew and as far as function goes this definatley does what it advertises it can do. Without the bag I am unable to use liquid yeast as my brew corner even in the middle of winter is warmer than recommended fermentation temps and this doesn't take into account the added extra temp from the exothermic reaction created during fermentation.
The real test will come during summer but I think the bag will be able to handle it. Cool Brewing claims the bag is able to lower the temp up to 16C lower than ambient with enough ice bottles. T hat being so I think you would even be able to lager using it and I might even have a go.
So overall I give it 4 out of 5. One star less because it's so expensive to import
Being a luddite I don't have a smart phone or digital camera so I've posted some photo's from the web
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