Zephyr259
Landlord.
I often see photos of imperial stouts with the krausen bursting out of the fermenter and it's making me reconsider my next brew's logistics.
I was intending on brewing a small 10L batch as that will give me around 30 bottles of a stout which will hopefully be around 10%. However, I ferment my small batches in a Spiedel 12L fermenter, it's a screw top barrel with a really big bubbler airlock on top and it mostly copes fine at 10L but if the stout is going to generate mad krausen then it may not be suitable.
My other option is either a 15L bucket but then I have to mess about with a siphon at the end and I haven't used my siphon in over a year so it might have gone a bit funny. Or I scale up and do my usual 15L batch in my full size conical. A side benefit to scaling up is the grain bill hits a level where a reiterated mash should work in the GF, 10L means half the grain bill would be so small that the wort wouldn't overflow and that can cause the pump to run dry like on my recent 60/-.
Any experiences with escaping krausen on an imperial stout?
I was intending on brewing a small 10L batch as that will give me around 30 bottles of a stout which will hopefully be around 10%. However, I ferment my small batches in a Spiedel 12L fermenter, it's a screw top barrel with a really big bubbler airlock on top and it mostly copes fine at 10L but if the stout is going to generate mad krausen then it may not be suitable.
My other option is either a 15L bucket but then I have to mess about with a siphon at the end and I haven't used my siphon in over a year so it might have gone a bit funny. Or I scale up and do my usual 15L batch in my full size conical. A side benefit to scaling up is the grain bill hits a level where a reiterated mash should work in the GF, 10L means half the grain bill would be so small that the wort wouldn't overflow and that can cause the pump to run dry like on my recent 60/-.
Any experiences with escaping krausen on an imperial stout?