Going all grain

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atcare

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Hi everyone. I would like to progress from kits with or without partial mashing and begin all grain brewing. I have pretty much decided on the single vessel type mash/boiler type. So my dilemma is Hopcat,Brew Devil, Klarstein or has anyone imported the new mk3 Robobrew. Grainfather is out the question and I don't fancy the Pico/Electrim/Brupaks ones. I wish to make 5 gallons to the fermentor so I assume the 30l versions are ok for this volume. Looking forward to your advice.
 
The cheapest option for moving on to AG from kits is going BIAB, as you can buy an 'upgrade kit' with a boiler, grain bag, chiller and bazooker/false bottom. Otherwise, if your heart is set on an all-in-one, these threads might help you out:
https://www.thehomebrewforum.co.uk/threads/all-grain-brewing-system-reviews.54878/
https://www.thehomebrewforum.co.uk/threads/home-brew-system-questions.71872/
https://www.thehomebrewforum.co.uk/threads/grainfather-v-other-systems.76458/

tl;dr: ACE, hopcat, brewdevil and klarstein are the same thing. The original bulldog brewer, which I have, is a bit more expensive but comes with a chiller and a bit more flexibility. The bulldog master brewer nobody has really tested because the price point isn't right, the grainfather is quite a bit more expensive but it is a quality piece of kit with a good community, and the braumeister is very expensive.
 
If you want to test the theory first, you can convert a Youngs fermentation bucket to a boiler with the addition of a couple of these https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/New-AC-2...eating-Tube-for-Electric-Kettle-/262595307357 and a bag to put your grain/hops https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/HOME-BRE...X-38cm-FITS-25ltr-FERMENTING-TUB/371552355782.

I added a tap and hop filter to mine but there's no reason why you can't syphon out to the fermenting vessel once the wort has cooled (overnight with the lid on - no chiller required). This will give you a taste of the end product ( a definite step forward ) and the duration/complexities of the process compared to kit brewing.

The compromise is that it's difficult to get a large enough volume boiling to end up with 40 pints in your barrel/bottles, but as a first step I think it makes sense. I'll be upgrading my 'boiler' to something bigger to get 5 gallon batches and adding better temperature control for the mash but at the moment don't see the need to go to 3 vessels.
 

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