13

I recently moved into a smaller apartment and no longer have the space for my 6.5 and 5 gallon carboys. Do people sell smaller carboys than this? I know Mr. Beer would be small enough, but I'd rather have something a bit bigger. Also, most extract kits come in 5 gallon recipes. I imagine I can half everything and brew 2.5 gallons at a time. Is there any downsides to this, or anything special I should look out for?

3
  • You could also use a handful of 1 gallon glass cider jugs. I know a few people who do this for experimental brews. No reason you couldn't do 3 one gallons, then blend them on bottling day.
    – Room3
    Jan 12, 2011 at 14:07
  • 1
    I once brewed a single gallon of beer in my room at college, the size being limited by the largest saucepan I had available. I had to give most of the eight pints away to people on the same staircase to make up for the smell I caused doing it. Jan 24, 2011 at 22:33
  • I can't speak to recipe slicing, but wanted to share that I picked up a couple of 1 gallon glass jugs and stoppers from Midwest Supplies (midwestsupplies.com/1-gallon-glass-jug.html). They are dirt cheap. I'm planning on using them for recipe experimentation on a smaller scale to save money on ingredients.
    – Matthew
    Oct 28, 2011 at 4:31

3 Answers 3

8

There are no concerns over going to a smaller batch size. 3 gallon carboys and buckets are easily found. Check out USplastics.com they have all sorts of funky food grade buckets and things.

The other great thing about doing say 2.5 gallon batch is that you can start passing up on starters. Just pitch an entire tube of White labs and you are definitely good to go.

However, a 3 gallon bucket is still going to take up almost as much space as a 5 gallon bucket. You can save on storage space by putting stuff in your bucket if that helps?

As far as halving a kit goes that's tough. I'd invest in some brewing software and set all your defaults to the new brewing batch size of 2.5 gallons. Then start scaling good recipes from reliable sources down to that size and go from there. Building your ingredient lists from scratch is probably better than halving kits. At the least you should take good notes on whats in your favorite kit. Then next time you can just buy half the ingredients separately.

1
  • USPlastics has some great prices. How do I tell if the plastics are food-grade or not? I like the idea of buying just what I need instead of halving the ingredients. I'll look around for some sites and software then.
    – Jerry C.
    Jan 12, 2011 at 4:58
5

Northern Brewer has 3 gallon carboys in both glass and plastic. And you can get 3 gallon kegs, as well.

If you can halve all of the ingredients in a kit, I can't think of any problems with brewing that way. My concern would be trying to split a jug of LME into halves. You'd probably need a scale to do it accurately.

1
  • 4
    If you can build your own recipes you can substitute dry malt extract for the liquid which keeps better after opening and is more easily measured. Just be aware the DME will give you 42 gravity points per gallon per pound and LME is only 36 points per gallon per pound. Jan 10, 2011 at 22:31
2

I use 3 gallon better bottles for small batches. Available at many brew shops, including Northern Brewer.

http://www.northernbrewer.com/brewing/better-bottle-plain-3-gallon-single.html

Regarding halving recipes, you can indeed literally halve your recipe and get very similar results to the full recipe.

If you want to continue to use kits, you'll probably end up wasting money over time.

I would suggest buying the ingredients separately and building your own kits. Don't worry! This is very easy. If you don't want to formulate recipes yourself, you can find them in many places online, including places like Northern Brewer who list their ingredients out:

Check out their Phat Tyre Ale: [Sorry, I can't link it because my rep isn't high enough. Search for "Phat Tyre Extract" at the site I linked above]

Down near the bottom is a Kit Inventory Sheet: [Sorry, I can't link it because my rep isn't high enough. Search for "Phat Tyre Extract" at the site I linked above]

SPECIALTY GRAIN -- 0.5 lbs Victory Malt -- 0.5 lbs Briess Caramel 60

FERMENTABLES -- 1 lb Pilsen dry malt extract (60 min) -- 6 lbs Amber malt syrup late addition (15 min)

HOPS & FLAVORINGS -- 1 oz Perle (60 min) -- 1 oz Hersbrucker (15 min)

Halve all of those ingredients and you'll have a lovely brew.:

SPECIALTY GRAIN -- 0.25 lbs Victory Malt -- 0.25 lbs Briess Caramel 60

FERMENTABLES -- 0.5 lb Pilsen dry malt extract (60 min) -- 3 lbs Amber malt syrup late addition (15 min)

HOPS & FLAVORINGS -- 0.5 oz Perle (60 min) -- 0.5 oz Hersbrucker (15 min)

1
  • Thanks for the recipe! It seems obvious, but it didn't occur to me that I could just put together my own kit. I'll look into this option more.
    – Jerry C.
    Jan 18, 2011 at 17:17

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.