Can I use an old 3 gallon water jug as a secondary? I have 4 of these and I'd love to able to have more beer fermenting at once.
What about the slimline jugs that are used for racking? If I used the Dremel to make some slits in the lid threads like the LBK has, could I also use this?
Thanks
Roots Brewing
Drinking
3. MB Wild Wheat ~6.5%
4. MB Girls & Boysenberries ~7%
5. MB El Diablo Blanco 8.1% 'Hop Jump'
8. Wheat Pale Ale (1st 5g brew, 7.5%)
9. Hard Apple Cider (12.1%)
Conditioning
11. Winter Ale (1.070 OG)
Fermenting
Mr. Frankenale
Secondary
(empty)
Planning
12. Blackberry Wheat
Ok, I'll bite. Why are you using secondaries. If you're brewing Mr. Beer batches, there is no need for a secondary. If you're doing most other batches, there is no need for a secondary. As I understand it, some types of beer need longer fermentation times and a secondary is recommended, but I don't see you posting anything about doing that.
I have over 9,000 posts on "another forum", which means absolutely nothing. Mr. Beer January 2014 Brewer of the Month with all the pomp and circumstance that comes with it...
Certificate in Brewing and Distillation Technology
Beers I regularly brew:
Bell's Best Brown clone
Irish Hills Red - I call this "Ann Arbor Red"
Mackinac Island Red - I call this "Michigan Red"
Oatmeal Stout - I call this Not Fat, Stout - Oatmeal Stout
Bottled 5 gallons of Ann Arbor Red on 4/18/17. Bottled 5 gallons of Michigan Red on 5/8/17.
Brewed in 2017 - 22.13 gallons (19.91 in 2012, 48.06 in 2013, 61.39 in 2014, 84.26 in 2015,46.39 in 2016)
Brewed in lifetime - 282.14 gallons
Drinkable beer on hand - 13.58 cases, with 6.11 cases ready in May and early June.
Average cost per 12 pack through all beer brewed - $6.27(ingredients only)
RickBeer wrote:Ok, I'll bite. Why are you using secondaries. If you're brewing Mr. Beer batches, there is no need for a secondary. If you're doing most other batches, there is no need for a secondary. As I understand it, some types of beer need longer fermentation times and a secondary is recommended, but I don't see you posting anything about doing that.
I understand it's not necessary. But if I move the batch to a secondary, it will free up the LBK for another batch, so eventually, I can have more beer conditioning and becoming ready around the same time.
Roots Brewing
Drinking
3. MB Wild Wheat ~6.5%
4. MB Girls & Boysenberries ~7%
5. MB El Diablo Blanco 8.1% 'Hop Jump'
8. Wheat Pale Ale (1st 5g brew, 7.5%)
9. Hard Apple Cider (12.1%)
Conditioning
11. Winter Ale (1.070 OG)
Fermenting
Mr. Frankenale
Secondary
(empty)
Planning
12. Blackberry Wheat
RickBeer wrote:Ok, I'll bite. Why are you using secondaries. If you're brewing Mr. Beer batches, there is no need for a secondary. If you're doing most other batches, there is no need for a secondary. As I understand it, some types of beer need longer fermentation times and a secondary is recommended, but I don't see you posting anything about doing that.
I understand it's not necessary. But if I move the batch to a secondary, it will free up the LBK for another batch, so eventually, I can have more beer conditioning and becoming ready around the same time.
Another LBK is $10...
I have two. I brew both, then take 3 weeks off and bottle both, then brew both again. Some have three and every week they brew. I don't see the point of buying a slimline and cutting it up when the LBK is made for it. Or buying a bucket and a bung and an airlock. Get multiple brewing devices and use them for their purpose, touch the beer once after that to bottle - and you only need ONE slimline to bottle since you can't bottle more than a bottle at a time unless you have more than two hands.
The key is to get your pipeline going so that at any point in time you have enough beer on hand to drink. We only drink a few a week - I wanted BREADTH and now have 13 different beers to pick from with a 14th one week in on brewing.
I have over 9,000 posts on "another forum", which means absolutely nothing. Mr. Beer January 2014 Brewer of the Month with all the pomp and circumstance that comes with it...
Certificate in Brewing and Distillation Technology
Beers I regularly brew:
Bell's Best Brown clone
Irish Hills Red - I call this "Ann Arbor Red"
Mackinac Island Red - I call this "Michigan Red"
Oatmeal Stout - I call this Not Fat, Stout - Oatmeal Stout
Bottled 5 gallons of Ann Arbor Red on 4/18/17. Bottled 5 gallons of Michigan Red on 5/8/17.
Brewed in 2017 - 22.13 gallons (19.91 in 2012, 48.06 in 2013, 61.39 in 2014, 84.26 in 2015,46.39 in 2016)
Brewed in lifetime - 282.14 gallons
Drinkable beer on hand - 13.58 cases, with 6.11 cases ready in May and early June.
Average cost per 12 pack through all beer brewed - $6.27(ingredients only)
Back in my very early years, I used the 5 gallon version of those bottles to ferment ALL my beer in....Primary and Secondary. Only a few were good and most were mediocre at best. Ale Pales are cheap and I suggest you stick with those. Or a Lowes bucket, a hole in the lid and a gasket for $5 would work for smaller batches.
PABs Brewing
Planning Brew good beer and live a hoppy life Fermenting
Drinking
Disfucted
Smelly Hops
(split batch) A Many Stringed Bow Up Next
Men In Black
Water bottles made from PET (recycle code 1) are identical in function and oxygen permeability to Better Bottles and are nearly impervious to oxygen. I've used Nestle 5-gallon PET jugs ($6 deposit) from a local grocery store for primary and secondary fermenters with great results, even for extended aging. Polycarbonate plastic (recycle code 7) allows too much oxygen through and may result in oxidized beer.
In Soviet Russia, beer brews you!
My brews
Fermenting:
Strawberry Rhubarb Wheat (5-gal)(AG)
Cranberry Mead
Buck-Flower Mead
Flanders Red (5-gal)(AG) x 2 On Tap:
Hefeweizen (5-gal)(AG)
Oaked Pear Cider
Can not disagree with you for moving to the 5 gallon batches. Are any of the recipes the same or work in combo with each other? If so you can do them as 5 gallon batches. I want clear beer for my cornys so I use secondaries pretty much for every batch. I brew a lot of high ABV & lagers both of which make secondaries indispensable to me. For most ales you really do not need them.
im Leben Geduld ist eine Tugend
in Brau-es ist eine Anforderung
in life patience is a virtue
in brewing it is a requirement
You are stronger than you think you are!!!!
~~Andy Wesley 1973 -- 2013
There was a guy on HBT who used the full size bottles as his primary. He got sick and tired of cleaning so would buy a jug of water, use most of it for his batch, brew in the water bottle, and when the beer was done he would go back to the store and exchange it for a nice, new, fresh bottle of water to brew his next batch. All I could think of when I read that was "BRILLIANT !!!" But I have a water filteration system and thus am too cheap to pay for bottled water so I am stuck with the scrubbing.
Silverleaf Vineyard & Winery / Old Mission Hops Exchange / Porchside Vineyard / The North York Brewing Company