What is your opinion of the BrewJacket could help a lot during fermentation
if you need both heating and cooling, brewjacket is an excellent investment. i was about to purchase some myself, until i figured out that i don't need cooling (my basement is a large walk-in fridge, year-round). will definitely improve your beer. an issue to keep in mind is that the brewjacket isn't compatible with all fermentors - glass carboys are a no-go.
Saw this on CL for $100 https://fredericksburg.craigslist.org/app/d/fredericksburg-chest-freezer/6865472867.html
that's also a good setup. however, it doesn't provide heat, and you want to be able to warm your beer in a controlled fashion:
- when fermentation starts, the beer heats up due to yeast activity (this is when you want cooling). but as fermentation peaks and starts to wind down, you want to maintain temps lest the yeast go dormant prematurely - so you need to add a little heat.
- some beers, like belgians, benefit from slowly ramp fermentation temps (start normal/cool, then ramp up a few degrees a day starting on day 3, until you hit your target temp and hold there). actually, i do a version of this for all my beers. daily ferm temps might look like 66, 66, 66, 68, 70, 72, hold until end of fermentation.
solution in this case is pretty easy: get a heating belt (
ex1,
ex2) and a
two-stage controller that does both heating and cooling. plug fridge into cooling control, plug heat belt into heating control, and put fermentor in fridge.
the ability to add heat is a nice-to-have, so not a deal-breaker. you can also "manually" add heat by opening up the fridge and letting warm air in, but air isn't the best transmitter of heat. also requires staying in top of it, regularly checking temps to determine if more warm air is needed, etc.
Also looking at some conical options for the fermentor
then maybe your funds are so meager after all...
conicals are amazing, but get expensive fast - especially when you factor in heating and cooling. but they are the cadillacs of fermentation... some day i'll win the lottery and get myself some. until then, i'm really happy with
these (which in turn are a cheaper version of
these).
Or should I be looking at an Electric kettle
i'd get temp control first.
If you were to invest in 5-10 gallon brewing where would you find the most bang for the buck and then what should be the on-deck purchase that I should be saving up for next
top 3 priorities should be: sanitation, temp control and pitch rate. i assume you have sanitation under control (all hail Star San), and you're working on temp control, so next up is pitch rate - which means getting an
erlenmeyer flask and a
stir plate. then use a
pitch rate calculator.