I just recently moved from San Diego to San Francisco, and really downgraded the size of my apartment. My wife and I share a 600 sq. ft. studio. Before I was heating my mash in my backyard on a propane burner, but that is no longer an option. Although I do have a small patio currently, our complex is completely gas-free, and they will not allow me to use an outdoor burner. I would be OK with simply doing partial mashes with extract in the kitchen, but we have electric burners and I dont think they will perform well.
I have been living in SF for almost 3 months now, and I just cant figure out a solution to my problem. My wife let me bring up my home brew kegerator in our small studio, and I am getting anxious to fill it up again.
I do 2-3 gallon all-grain batches on my electric stove. Anything much more than 3 gallons preboil volume requires me to leave the lid about halfway on my kettle to hold a strong boil. It’s not ideal, but it’s manageable. I use a converted 5-gallon cooler as my mash tun, but BIAB is another option for indoor brewing.
You could also look into making an electric heatstick if you want to try to do full volume batches on your patio.
It’s not as convenient and likely more expensive but are there any “Brew on Premise” places within a reasonable distance? You could do the boil there and add the yeast at home.
Welcome to the Bay!!! I struggled with same problem in my apartment. I’ve started doing 4.5 gallon batches (with 4 gallons going into a keg) and use a 5 gallon gott cooler as a mash tun. To do full boils I use this:
It is pretty powerful so you might need to mess around with your stove temp to get the boil you want. I’ve used it for about 6 months and it works great.
I’m an apartment brewer in SF. Go small. Also, the San Francisco Homebrewers Guild started up this year and has done some great events–check them out on Facebook. You may be able to partner with some folks with more space. I just saw a post on Facebook about using small kegs. (I have more space than average–such as a deck–just no time right now. But message me anyway. There are three homebrewers on this block alone, and we brewers need to stick together!)
I live in a tiny apartment with the same “no propane burners/grills” rule. I’ve resigned myself to the electric stove, which although not ideal, does still work. As many people said you can do smaller batches, and that is one way to go. If you still would like to do 5 gallons, here’s my tips.
Partial Mash/Partial Boil. I boil 3 gallons of wort on an electric burner on high. It’s slow, but it does work. I will dilute everything to 5 gallons or so in the fermenter. I use a 2.5 gallon cooler to do my mashing. (Batch sparge)
Always remove the pot from the burner when adding extract. I’ve been told and what I have experienced is electric stoves are notorious for scortching extract.