![]() |
|
Welcome to FoodBanter.com forums which provide access to the finest food and drink related newsgroups. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most newsgroup discussions and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics to the food related newsgroups, communicate privately with other FoodBanter.com members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact support. |
|
|||||||
| Winemaking (rec.crafts.winemaking) Discussion of the process, recipes, tips, techniques and general exchange of lore on the process, methods and history of wine making. Includes traditional grape wines, sparkling wines & champagnes. |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
I've got some choices. one 6 gallon carboy, or six 1 gallon carboys
for secondary fermenting. can someone give me some advice? (actually it is more like an additional 6g carboy or six gallon apple juice jugs, price may decide regardless) OT note: got a 65g food grade plastic barrel, make one heck of a primary |
|
|||
|
On Jul 5, 1:55 pm, Tater wrote:
I've got some choices. one 6 gallon carboy, or six 1 gallon carboys for secondary fermenting. can someone give me some advice? (actually it is more like an additional 6g carboy or six gallon apple juice jugs, price may decide regardless) OT note: got a 65g food grade plastic barrel, make one heck of a primary Well, if youre looking to do a lot of different variaties of a base wine later on, then the jugs might be the way to go. That way you can add oak to some, carbonate others, add fruit to the rest, etc. They do take a lot of space though. I'm pretty much the only one who drinks my wine, so I do 1 gal primary and change up the recipe for each gal so they're a little different, then I can choose which one I like the best and make bigger batches. mike |
|
|||
|
On Jul 5, 12:24 pm, MLynchLtd wrote:
On Jul 5, 1:55 pm, Tater wrote: I've got some choices. one 6 gallon carboy, or six 1 gallon carboys for secondary fermenting. can someone give me some advice? (actually it is more like an additional 6g carboy or six gallon apple juice jugs, price may decide regardless) OT note: got a 65g food grade plastic barrel, make one heck of a primary Well, if youre looking to do a lot of different variaties of a base wine later on, then the jugs might be the way to go. That way you can add oak to some, carbonate others, add fruit to the rest, etc. They do take a lot of space though. I'm pretty much the only one who drinks my wine, so I do 1 gal primary and change up the recipe for each gal so they're a little different, then I can choose which one I like the best and make bigger batches. mike i use the 5 gallon and 6 gallon carboys myself . If you have the right recipe you can't have to much wine . It makes it easer to transfer from a 5 gallon to a 5 gallon then all the little bottles . rich |
|
|||
|
the *best* advice is to get them all. If you're gonna keep at this hobby,
sooner or later you'll need all the glasware you can lay hands on. If you have to choose a purchase: you can probably mooch the gallon jugs easier than scamming a free 6 gal cowboy. buy the carboy, then start scouring the recycling bins for the gallon jugs. if you could score the 65G barrel, then gallon jugs ought to be no prob for a master scrounger such as yourself... JMHO. regards, bob "Tater" wrote in message oups.com... I've got some choices. one 6 gallon carboy, or six 1 gallon carboys for secondary fermenting. can someone give me some advice? (actually it is more like an additional 6g carboy or six gallon apple juice jugs, price may decide regardless) OT note: got a 65g food grade plastic barrel, make one heck of a primary |
|
|||
|
Yeah, I use everything from 7 gallons on down to 3 liters, you can
never have too many. I finally started marking how many bottles each carboy holds, I have some 5 gallon carboys that hold over 26 750 ml bottles, most hold 25.5. I really like the little 3 gallon carboys too; they take up very little space and can be used to split batches so you can experiment. Joe |
|
|||
|
On Jul 9, 11:41 am, Joe Sallustio wrote:
Yeah, I use everything from 7 gallons on down to 3 liters, you can never have too many. I finally started marking how many bottles each carboy holds, I have some 5 gallon carboys that hold over 26 750 ml bottles, most hold 25.5. I really like the little 3 gallon carboys too; they take up very little space and can be used to split batches so you can experiment. Joe joe, I am not really in the mood to experiment, although i'll probably vary each 6 gallon batch i'll be starting this year. but what can you vary? most of the stuff inthe recipies i am evaluating tend to dump all the stuff in the primary and go. |