I am currently doing BIAB, but my wife was nice enough to get a gift certificate to the homebrew store for my birthday so I’m going to pick a couple things up. They are not particullarly helpful there though…
Presently I’m doing 2.5 gallon batches but would like to increase that to 3-4 gallons to make it more worth my time. It’s just me drinking it (giving a few away but it’s mainly me) so I don’t want to do 5 gallon batches at this time. Never say never to the 5 gallon though.
This all being said, is a 5 gallon cooler large enough to do 3-4 gallons of high gravity beer and 5 gallons of standard gravity?
My reading of websites and reviews show this will probably work just fine for what I’m looking to do.
For giggles, is a 10 gallon way too big to do say a standard gravity 3 gallon batch? Do the cons outweigh the indifferences as far the filtering capabilites?
a 5 gallon beverage cooler will handle approximately 10-11 pounds of grain, a 10 gallon will handle roughly 20lbs and this is with a standard single infusion mash and batch sparge or fly sparge. If you typically do smaller batches and can accommodate the grain bill in a 5 your set. If you use the larger 10 gallon then heat loss can be an issue due to the amount of empty space in the tun.
My standard post-boil batch size is approximately 3.66 gallons. I use a 5-gallon Igloo beverage cooler with room to spare. I can mash up to 13 pounds of grain with my setup.
I wonder if anyone has experience using a ten gallon. It’s possible the heat loss is minimal from the airspace in which case it would be a good option since you sound like the occasion 5 gallon batch is possible. You could also rig up a floating insulation device to eliminate the air space problem. Also don’t rule out drinking more.
I use a 10 gallon beverage cooler, for 5.5 gallon batches I don’t lose heat over an hour. On occasions when I do a smaller batch I have a circle cut out of 2" rigid foam insulation that I place on top of the mash and it retains the heat well, +/- 1 loss of temp over an hour, its a viable option IMO
When I made the jump to all grain everybody insisted I would want to go bigger at some point and I would never have a problem getting rid of beer so I should spend the money once and get a ten gallon cooler. So I did.
Most of my batches are three gallons or less. The largest batch I’ve done in the five years I’ve brewed all grain is six gallons. I have a two gallon cooler I use for one and two gallon batches. I can squeeze in a 2.5 gallon batch if the gravity is low enough. Otherwise 2.5 gallons and up go in the ten gallon cooler. Three gallon batches tend to lose several degrees over the mash so I tend not to do a lot of those these days unless I am decoction or infusion mashing in which I am adding more heat to the grain during the mash.
In hindsight I should have gone with a five gallon cooler. Maybe someday I buy that fifteen gallon rye whiskey barrel and need to fill it…
Thanks for the replies, I think I’m going with a 5 gallon cooler. If I want to make a big beer, I may have to scale back down to 2.5 or 3 gallon. But I think the 5 gallon cooler will be serviceable as I learn more.
I’ve tried both; when batch sparging there’s less grist sloshing out when using a round cooler.
Denny, any advice on how many times a cooler can be used before it needs to be tossed? Wondering if there’s a chemical breakdown going on in the plastic when there’s a little warping in the cooler. Thanks.
The plastics used are food-safe to 250°F. If it actually splits, I would toss it
I would second Denny’s recommendation on a larger, rectangular cooler. Even a 10 gal won’t be big enough if you decide you want to do 5 gal of barley wine, or a 10 gal split batch for experimenting, co-brewing with a friend, etc. It’s also a lot easier to build a manifold for one if you aren’t going the toilet braid route, and they tend to be more durable than the round beverage coolers.
I disagree with those who telling you go bigger. I believe in picking the tool for the job. A small batch does not have as much specific heat capacity as a larger batch, and a bigger than required cooler represents a larger thermal sink. I have brewed 1.072 5.5-gallon batches with a 5-gallon beverage cooler. If am brewing a beer bigger than 1.072, I am brewing a smaller batch because it is going to get bulk conditioned and bottled. If you are certain that you will be brewing mostly 3-gallon batches, go with the 5-gallon cooler. It’s smaller, easier to store, and holds temperature better when brewing small batches. Life is too short for compromise brewing.
I switched from using a five gallon round to a large rectangular cooler.
The larger rectanglar cooler didn’t drain near as well. It just seemed like over kill to me. Plus the smaller one is easier to tote to the compost pile.
I went back to the round one unless I’m doing a high gravity batch that won’t fit in the 5 gallon.
When I brewed 4 gallon batches, I used a 5 gallon round cooler and it was perfect. I bumped my batch size up to 4.75 and am happier with my 36qt Coleman Xtreme cooler (this is a really good option for you). The 5 gallon cooler is definitely easier to clean if you’re just cleaning in your kitchen sink.