Hi All,
so, I know most people use a fridge to ferment in because of the temperature stability it offers, however I have been on a number of brewery tours and the primary (Round) and Secondary (Conical) fermented they use rarely seem to be temperature controlled or am I missing something?
My next question is around primary and secondary fermenting. Let me say I'm a fan and I use buckets as rounds and I leave the ale there until the fermentation starts to slow and then I move a glass carboy. This is all very manual atm and I was planing to build a large wall mounted rack so, I could do the whole process via gravity. (other than initial pumping into the round). Clearly this wont fit into a fridge, however I was planing to build an insulated enclosure to stabilize the temperature especially in the winter months.
I then keg and bottle and condition in a fridge.
Anyone see me hitting problems?
thx L
so, I know most people use a fridge to ferment in because of the temperature stability it offers, however I have been on a number of brewery tours and the primary (Round) and Secondary (Conical) fermented they use rarely seem to be temperature controlled or am I missing something?
My next question is around primary and secondary fermenting. Let me say I'm a fan and I use buckets as rounds and I leave the ale there until the fermentation starts to slow and then I move a glass carboy. This is all very manual atm and I was planing to build a large wall mounted rack so, I could do the whole process via gravity. (other than initial pumping into the round). Clearly this wont fit into a fridge, however I was planing to build an insulated enclosure to stabilize the temperature especially in the winter months.
I then keg and bottle and condition in a fridge.
Anyone see me hitting problems?
thx L