20 Qt Basic Brew Pot, 24 guage, w/ lid
20 Qt Brew Pot
This 20 quart brew pot from Polar Ware is the perfect size for use with our ingredient kits. Constructed with quality stainless steel it is suitable for stove top or propane burner use.
1.55 mm stainless steel, boxed
BoilerMaker 10 Gallon Brew Kettle by Blichmann Engineering
Ten gallon BoilerMaker makes an ideal mash tun or HLT for five gallon all grain brewers, or a full-volume boil kettle for five gallon extract or AG batches.
Perfect size for brewing the standand 5 gallon homebrew batches, will handle over 50 beers per brew!!!
The Boilermaker Brewpots were designed from the ground up for the homebrewer.
Standard Equipment includes:
* Heavy 18 gauge 304 stainless steel construction
* Adjustable BrewMometer™
* Stainless 3pc ball valve
* Glass level gauge
* Snap-in Dip tube (reduces bottom of the kettle beer loss)
* Stepped botton to support optional mash screen (virtually eliminates sidewall shunting in the mash)
* Clean-out brush for the sight glass
* Stainless flashing to protect the equipment from the flame
The key to top performance of your new BoilerMaker brew pot is selecting the size that best fits your brewing needs. Selecting too small, or too big of a brew pot, mash tun, or hot liquor tank (HLT) can cause frustration and poor performance.
Boil kettles: The Boilermaker makes the perfect Boil Kettle, especially with the addition of the optional Boil Screen. Blichmann recommends that you always do a full wort boil, as do most brewing texts and advanced brewers. This will minimize the addition of top-up water to compensate for boil-off, and starting with the volume called for in your recipe will let you know early in the process if you've hit your target gravity giving you more time to correct the problem. Also, you'll get more consistent hop utilization by sticking to the recipe volumes, as utilization changes significantly with specific wort gravity. Last, but certainly not least, is boil-over prevention...having enough head space will keep this irritating problem at bay.
That said, they recommend a boil kettle approximately 2 times the size of the finished batch size. Although this may sound like a bit much, a 10 gal batch will typically start with 13-14 gal pre-boil once you compensate for cooling contraction, transfer losses, and boil off. This will allow for a reasonable head space to reduce boil-over problems. For example, if you're a 10gal batch brewer, you'd select the 20 gal BoilerMaker brew pot as your boil kettle.
Mash Vessels: With the optional Button Louvre false bottom, the Boilermaker becomes a fantastic Mashing Vessel. Blichmann recommends filling your mash vessel no more than 75% of capacity. This will allow sufficient space for dough-in of the grains and additions of sparge water and sparge arms, etc. The chart below includes various water to grist ratios to assist you in your selection. The green column is their recommended water to grist ratio. Minimum volumes are to ensure that the thermometer probe is adequately submerged, and also so you have an adequate grain bed depth for proper wort filtration. Blichmann has designed the BoilerMakertm brew pot sizes to seamlessly blend from size to size, so you'll never need to sacrifice.
Hot Liquor Tanks: The boilermaker is a perfect Hot Liquor tank right out of the box. Blichmann recommends sizing your HLT the same size as your mash tun to ensure you have plenty of sparge water available on brew day.
EXEMPT FROM ALL DISCOUNTS DUE TO MFGR AGREEMENT
Please allow 1-3 weeks for delivery, as Boilermaker kettles ship directly from the manufacturer via FedEx Ground.
BoilerMaker 15 Gallon Brew Kettle by Blichmann Engineering
Fifteen gallon BoilerMaker makes an ideal mash tun or HLT for Ten gallon all grain brewers.
Perfect size for brewing 10 gallon batches, 2 corny kegs or over 100 beers per brew!!!
A growing number of homebrewers are moving up to the 10 gallon batch size, more beer to enjoy and share with about the same amount of work as a 5 gallon batch.
The Boilermaker Brewpots were designed from the ground up for the homebrewer.
Standard Equipment includes:
* Heavy 18 gauge 304 stainless steel construction
* Adjustable BrewMometer™
* Stainless 3pc ball valve
* Glass level gauge
* Snap-in Dip tube (reduces bottom of the kettle beer loss)
* Stepped botton to support optional mash screen (virtually eliminates sidewall shunting in the mash)
* Clean-out brush for the sight glass
* Stainless flashing to protect the equipment from the flame
The key to top performance of your new BoilerMaker brew pot is selecting the size that best fits your brewing needs. Selecting too small, or too big of a brew pot, mash tun, or hot liquor tank (HLT) can cause frustration and poor performance.
Boil kettles: The Boilermaker makes the perfect Boil Kettle, especially with the addition of the optional Boil Screen. Blichmann recommends that you always do a full wort boil, as do most brewing texts and advanced brewers. This will minimize the addition of top-up water to compensate for boil-off, and starting with the volume called for in your recipe will let you know early in the process if you've hit your target gravity giving you more time to correct the problem. Also, you'll get more consistent hop utilization by sticking to the recipe volumes, as utilization changes significantly with specific wort gravity. Last, but certainly not least, is boil-over prevention...having enough head space will keep this irritating problem at bay.
That said, they recommend a boil kettle approximately 2 times the size of the finished batch size. Although this may sound like a bit much, a 10 gal batch will typically start with 13-14 gal pre-boil once you compensate for cooling contraction, transfer losses, and boil off. This will allow for a reasonable head space to reduce boil-over problems. For example, if you're a 10gal batch brewer, you'd select the 20 gal BoilerMaker brew pot as your boil kettle.
Mash Vessels: With the optional Button Louvre false bottom, the Boilermaker becomes a fantastic Mashing Vessel. Blichmann recommends filling your mash vessel no more than 75% of capacity. This will allow sufficient space for dough-in of the grains and additions of sparge water and sparge arms, etc. The chart below includes various water to grist ratios to assist you in your selection. The green column is their recommended water to grist ratio. Minimum volumes are to ensure that the thermometer probe is adequately submerged, and also so you have an adequate grain bed depth for proper wort filtration. Blichmann has designed the BoilerMakertm brew pot sizes to seamlessly blend from size to size, so you'll never need to sacrifice.
Hot Liquor Tanks: The boilermaker is a perfect Hot Liquor tank right out of the box. Blichmann recommends sizing your HLT the same size as your mash tun to ensure you have plenty of sparge water available on brew day.
EXEMPT FROM ALL DISCOUNTS DUE TO MFGR AGREEMENT
Please allow 1-3 weeks for delivery, as Boilermaker kettles ship directly from the manufacturer via FedEx Ground.
BoilerMaker 20 Gallon Brew Kettle by BoilerMaker 20 Gallon Brew Kettle
Twenty gallon BoilerMaker for fifteen gallon brew lengths
Perfect size for brewing 15 gallon batches, 3 corny kegs or over 150 beers per brew!!
The Boilermaker Brewpots were designed from the ground up for the homebrewer.
Standard Equipment includes:
* Heavy 18 gauge 304 stainless steel construction
* Adjustable BrewMometer™
* Stainless 3pc ball valve
* Glass level gauge
* Snap-in Dip tube (reduces bottom of the kettle beer loss)
* Stepped botton to support optional mash screen (virtually eliminates sidewall shunting in the mash)
* Clean-out brush for the sight glass
* Stainless flashing to protect the equipment from the flame
The key to top performance of your new BoilerMaker brew pot is selecting the size that best fits your brewing needs. Selecting too small, or too big of a brew pot, mash tun, or hot liquor tank (HLT) can cause frustration and poor performance.
Boil kettles: The Boilermaker makes the perfect Boil Kettle, especially with the addition of the optional Boil Screen. Blichmann recommends that you always do a full wort boil, as do most brewing texts and advanced brewers. This will minimize the addition of top-up water to compensate for boil-off, and starting with the volume called for in your recipe will let you know early in the process if you've hit your target gravity giving you more time to correct the problem. Also, you'll get more consistent hop utilization by sticking to the recipe volumes, as utilization changes significantly with specific wort gravity. Last, but certainly not least, is boil-over prevention...having enough head space will keep this irritating problem at bay.
That said, they recommend a boil kettle approximately 2 times the size of the finished batch size. Although this may sound like a bit much, a 10 gal batch will typically start with 13-14 gal pre-boil once you compensate for cooling contraction, transfer losses, and boil off. This will allow for a reasonable head space to reduce boil-over problems. For example, if you're a 10gal batch brewer, you'd select the 20 gal BoilerMaker brew pot as your boil kettle.
Mash Vessels: With the optional Button Louvre false bottom, the Boilermaker becomes a fantastic Mashing Vessel. Blichmann recommends filling your mash vessel no more than 75% of capacity. This will allow sufficient space for dough-in of the grains and additions of sparge water and sparge arms, etc. The chart below includes various water to grist ratios to assist you in your selection. The green column is their recommended water to grist ratio. Minimum volumes are to ensure that the thermometer probe is adequately submerged, and also so you have an adequate grain bed depth for proper wort filtration. Blichmann has designed the BoilerMakertm brew pot sizes to seamlessly blend from size to size, so you'll never need to sacrifice.
Hot Liquor Tanks: The boilermaker is a perfect Hot Liquor tank right out of the box. Blichmann recommends sizing your HLT the same size as your mash tun to ensure you have plenty of sparge water available on brew day.
EXEMPT FROM ALL DISCOUNTS DUE TO MFGR AGREEMENT
Please allow 1-3 weeks for delivery, as Boilermaker kettles ship directly from the manufacturer via FedEx Ground.
BoilerMaker 30 Gallon Brew Kettle by Blichmann Engineering
Thirty gallon BoilerMaker ... if you're going to brew anyway, you might as well make a lot!
Perfect size for brewing 20 gallon batches, 4 corny kegs or over 200 beers per brew!!!
The Boilermaker Brewpots were designed from the ground up for the homebrewer.
Standard Equipment includes:
* Heavy 18 gauge 304 stainless steel construction
* Adjustable BrewMometer™
* Stainless 3pc ball valve
* Glass level gauge
* Snap-in Dip tube (reduces bottom of the kettle beer loss)
* Stepped botton to support optional mash screen (virtually eliminates sidewall shunting in the mash)
* Clean-out brush for the sight glass
* Stainless flashing to protect the equipment from the flame
The key to top performance of your new BoilerMaker brew pot is selecting the size that best fits your brewing needs. Selecting too small, or too big of a brew pot, mash tun, or hot liquor tank (HLT) can cause frustration and poor performance.
Boil kettles: The Boilermaker makes the perfect Boil Kettle, especially with the addition of the optional Boil Screen. Blichmann recommends that you always do a full wort boil, as do most brewing texts and advanced brewers. This will minimize the addition of top-up water to compensate for boil-off, and starting with the volume called for in your recipe will let you know early in the process if you've hit your target gravity giving you more time to correct the problem. Also, you'll get more consistent hop utilization by sticking to the recipe volumes, as utilization changes significantly with specific wort gravity. Last, but certainly not least, is boil-over prevention...having enough head space will keep this irritating problem at bay.
That said, they recommend a boil kettle approximately 2 times the size of the finished batch size. Although this may sound like a bit much, a 10 gal batch will typically start with 13-14 gal pre-boil once you compensate for cooling contraction, transfer losses, and boil off. This will allow for a reasonable head space to reduce boil-over problems. For example, if you're a 10gal batch brewer, you'd select the 20 gal BoilerMaker brew pot as your boil kettle.
Mash Vessels: With the optional Button Louvre false bottom, the Boilermaker becomes a fantastic Mashing Vessel. Blichmann recommends filling your mash vessel no more than 75% of capacity. This will allow sufficient space for dough-in of the grains and additions of sparge water and sparge arms, etc. The chart below includes various water to grist ratios to assist you in your selection. The green column is their recommended water to grist ratio. Minimum volumes are to ensure that the thermometer probe is adequately submerged, and also so you have an adequate grain bed depth for proper wort filtration. Blichmann has designed the BoilerMakertm brew pot sizes to seamlessly blend from size to size, so you'll never need to sacrifice.
Hot Liquor Tanks: The boilermaker is a perfect Hot Liquor tank right out of the box. Blichmann recommends sizing your HLT the same size as your mash tun to ensure you have plenty of sparge water available on brew day.
EXEMPT FROM ALL DISCOUNTS DUE TO MFGR AGREEMENT
Please allow 1-3 weeks for delivery, as Boilermaker kettles ship directly from the manufacturer via FedEx Ground.
BoilerMaker 55 Gallon Brew Kettle by Blichmann Engineering
BoilerMaker sized for large-scale homebrew or small-scale pro systems.
Now you can brew a full BBL batch, that's 2 kegs, that's 31 gallons, that's over 300 beers!!!
The Boilermaker Brewpots were designed from the ground up for the homebrewer.
Standard Equipment includes:
* Heavy 18 gauge 304 stainless steel construction
* Adjustable BrewMometer™
* Stainless 3pc ball valve
* Glass level gauge
* Snap-in Dip tube (reduces bottom of the kettle beer loss)
* Stepped botton to support optional mash screen (virtually eliminates sidewall shunting in the mash)
* Clean-out brush for the sight glass
* Stainless flashing to protect the equipment from the flame
The key to top performance of your new BoilerMaker brew pot is selecting the size that best fits your brewing needs. Selecting too small, or too big of a brew pot, mash tun, or hot liquor tank (HLT) can cause frustration and poor performance.
Boil kettles: The Boilermaker makes the perfect Boil Kettle, especially with the addition of the optional Boil Screen. Blichmann recommends that you always do a full wort boil, as do most brewing texts and advanced brewers. This will minimize the addition of top-up water to compensate for boil-off, and starting with the volume called for in your recipe will let you know early in the process if you've hit your target gravity giving you more time to correct the problem. Also, you'll get more consistent hop utilization by sticking to the recipe volumes, as utilization changes significantly with specific wort gravity. Last, but certainly not least, is boil-over prevention...having enough head space will keep this irritating problem at bay.
That said, they recommend a boil kettle approximately 2 times the size of the finished batch size. Although this may sound like a bit much, a 10 gal batch will typically start with 13-14 gal pre-boil once you compensate for cooling contraction, transfer losses, and boil off. This will allow for a reasonable head space to reduce boil-over problems. For example, if you're a 10gal batch brewer, you'd select the 20 gal BoilerMaker brew pot as your boil kettle.
Mash Vessels: With the optional Button Louvre false bottom, the Boilermaker becomes a fantastic Mashing Vessel. Blichmann recommends filling your mash vessel no more than 75% of capacity. This will allow sufficient space for dough-in of the grains and additions of sparge water and sparge arms, etc. The chart below includes various water to grist ratios to assist you in your selection. The green column is their recommended water to grist ratio. Minimum volumes are to ensure that the thermometer probe is adequately submerged, and also so you have an adequate grain bed depth for proper wort filtration. Blichmann has designed the BoilerMakertm brew pot sizes to seamlessly blend from size to size, so you'll never need to sacrifice.
Hot Liquor Tanks: The boilermaker is a perfect Hot Liquor tank right out of the box. Blichmann recommends sizing your HLT the same size as your mash tun to ensure you have plenty of sparge water available on brew day.
EXEMPT FROM ALL DISCOUNTS DUE TO MFGR AGREEMENT
Please allow 1-3 weeks for delivery, as Boilermaker kettles ship directly from the manufacturer via FedEx Ground.
BALL VALVE, 1/2FPT X 1/2FPT FP (SS)
STAINLESS BALL VALVE
1/2" Female Pipe Thread x 1/2" Female Pipe Thread
Precise metering of gas & liquids.
A good, inexpensive alternative to commercial grade 3-piece units AND a better alternative to foreign made (cheap) units sold on forum sites and other shops!
Precision machined in the USA!
FEATURES:
* These are full port stainless steel ball valves with a two-piece body.
* Each end of the valve has female pipe threads, and is suitable for applications where the temperature will be between -20 to 450 degrees F with pressure under 1000 psi.
* All internal contact points (body, ball, cap and stern) are 316 stainless steel, all other metal parts are 304 stainless.
* Seat and washers are PTFE (teflon).
30 Qt. Heavy Stock Pot, 18 guage, w/ lid
30 Qt Brew Pot
This 30 quart brew pot from Polar Ware is the perfect size for use with our ingredient kits. Constructed with quality stainless steel it is suitable for stove top or propane burner use.
Big enough to do a full 5 gallon boil!
HomeBrew4Less.com LLC, 890 Lincoln Way
W, Chambersburg, PA 17202
(717) 504-8534
Store Hours Tue to Sat 11:30 am to 5:30 pm
Telephone Support 8 am to 8 pm
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