A heat belt might be better, although I don't know how it would cope with a very cold shed if we get a bad winter. I user to sit the FV in a large tub of water (with a dash of bleach in it) which I warmed up with a fish tank heater - but our hard London water ruined it after a couple of brews. I was never keen on dangling a heater directly into my beer.Nice one lads. Also, I’m thinking what kind of heater do I need ? Will probably be outside in shed, so can I Just chuck it in an old fridge, will the exothermic yeast reaction be enough to keep the heat up or better to get a fish tank type immersion heater ?
Nice one lads. Also, I’m thinking what kind of heater do I need ?
One of the joys of brewing is buying new kit etc.
Have you looked at the Youngs Micro Brewery starter kits? They include PBs and the APA, AIPA and Amber Ales are very good. Brew2Bottle have them for under £58 with a possible 5% discount for 1st order.
I've three of these kits, primarily bought for the beer kit and the PB, the rest is a bonus.
You may want to consider a Bench capper instead of a winged/handheld capper.
As for carbing, I use standard granulated sugar. Either a half or a level teaspoon per 500ml bottle. Also, I use a 500ml PET/Plastic bottle at least once to check carbonation levels.
Don't use dme for carbing.
To use the FV to batch Prime you would obviously need 2 FVs and need to be careful with sanitation and introduction of air whilst transferring.
Ah so you can’t fill some bottles and the pressure vessel from the same FV ?Yes, that's the kit I've got...
You may want to add another FV with a tap to the order. Let's you brew something for the PB and something to bottle all at the same time :)
As for drinking quickly I generally dont drink Monday to Wednesday, but I’ll have 4-6 pints on a Thursday night, 8-10 on a Friday, 12-15 on a Saturday and 6-10 on a Sunday :) I think I’ll probably see off a full batch in 2-3 weeks, will it keep in a PV for 3 weeks ish ?The capper with the get er brewed kits you linked to isn't the long lasting type. Better to have a metal one with red handles. You'll always need a fermenter/bucket regardless of if you use kits ag or extract. I can vouch for the brewfferm kits they are great although they do generally require a few months in bottle to reach their best. If drinking quickly a plastic pressure barrel could suit you, but if keeping your beer for extended periods better to keep it in glass or a cornie keg than plastic.
Ah so you can’t fill some bottles and the pressure vessel from the same FV ?
short term can I just drill this bucket and fit a tap ?The FV in the kit doesn't have a tap but an FV with a tap is better for bottling.
With an additional FV you can
A) use it to batch prime a brew in the other FV.
B) Brew two kits at the same time.
C) use it to clean all your equipment by making up your sterilisation solution in it.
FVs are very versatile
short term can I just drill this bucket and fit a tap ?
You can but you don't need/want to use a tap if you're transferring to the PB. Just syphon it out using the large tube provided, takes a couple of minutes..if you want it in a bottle also, carefully use the tap on the PB..
And of course you'd need to buy a tap and run risk of creating a leaky FV . A new FV with a tap is about £10..
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