UofL student, active in the distilled spirit industry
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UofL student, active in the distilled spirit industry
Hi guys, I'm currently enrolled as a Chemical Engineering student at the University of Louisville. I have been working at a spirits company for around a year now, and I'm just now getting into homebrewing and wanting to learn more in depth practical knowledge that I can bring back to work with me. I have done a lot of work with cooperage, so I hope to offer some tidbits and insights into that side of things.
Re: UofL student, active in the distilled spirit industry
Welcome to HD, hope you find the forum useful in you studies.
- jonnys_spirit
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Re: UofL student, active in the distilled spirit industry
Welcome to HD BFBB! I recommend spending some time reading and researching around here before purchasing or building but also at the same time to start running soonest
Theory and Practice go hand in hand... Looking forward to your input too!
Cheers,
jonny
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Cheers,
jonny
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i prefer my mash shaken, not stirred
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i prefer my mash shaken, not stirred
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Re: UofL student, active in the distilled spirit industry
I appreciate it Jonny. My buddy I'm rooming with already has some basic brewing materials and has made some at home. All of my experience in mashing, brewing, and distilling so far has been at work, so I'm definitely excited to build my own rig! I'll make sure to look around for some of the more precise equipment I can find in this forum. Cheers!jonnys_spirit wrote: ↑Mon Jul 31, 2023 7:22 am Welcome to HD BFBB! I recommend spending some time reading and researching around here before purchasing or building but also at the same time to start running soonestTheory and Practice go hand in hand... Looking forward to your input too!
Cheers,
jonny
Re: UofL student, active in the distilled spirit industry
Welcome to HD man. Louisville is just down the road from me. I live in Frankfort. Tons of knowledge here. You're in the right place. Have fun and stay safe.
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Re: UofL student, active in the distilled spirit industry
Would it be bad manners to ask what company you have been working for?
I'll be very interested to hear your observations about different assertions made at the pro level vs the hobby level.
Now I'm not talking about the materials handling efficiencies of the pros compared to the ad-hoc methods many broke ass hobbyists have to use.
I'm talking about actual practical knowledge about fermentation and distillation theory.
Frankly I'm more recently kind of shocked at the,,,,,BS some industry luminaries are spewing. It's almost laughable.
I'll be very interested to hear your observations about different assertions made at the pro level vs the hobby level.
Now I'm not talking about the materials handling efficiencies of the pros compared to the ad-hoc methods many broke ass hobbyists have to use.
I'm talking about actual practical knowledge about fermentation and distillation theory.
Frankly I'm more recently kind of shocked at the,,,,,BS some industry luminaries are spewing. It's almost laughable.
Trample the injured and hurdle the dead.
- Saltbush Bill
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Re: UofL student, active in the distilled spirit industry
In this particular instance I would say that it's just Louisville dogma being propagated by " that's the way we've always done it".Saltbush Bill wrote: ↑Wed Aug 02, 2023 6:13 pmMight it be that it would look "unprofessional" to not make fermentation seem as complex as possible?.....BS, Marketing and Smoke n Mirrors?
The debate is weather or not a single wall vessel and a cooling coil does a better job than a vessel with a proper cooling jacket. Hands down the cooling jacket is better on multiple levels.
Is the coil cheaper? Yes.
And if that is the goal to buy the cheaper tank then that's fine. But just say that. Don't make up ridiculous reasons why a coil is best.
A coil is not best. The coiled tank will require far more labor hours to sanitize. Everyone I know that has worked with either steam coil or cooling coil hates them. Fact I had a call today with someone looking to get rid of their coil set up and replace with jackets.
And finally,,,,,,,,have you ever seen a proper brewery using cooling coils over a cooling jacket? Not likely.
The dude said coils cool best. And I'm looking at 3000 gallon wine tanks with with a dimple jacket that cover barely 1/3 of the tank right now. Btw, wine ferments at cooler temps than a bourbon fermentation.
Another friend bought some 32,000 gallon tanks that are old Pabst tanks. All jacketed. And yes thirty thousand gallons. No coil.
Ah sorry. On kind of a rant because this dude is kind of a micro celebrity and certainly a main player in Louisville.
Anyway to get this thread back on track, I encourage the OP to trust his own observations and do not get to drunk on some of the Louisville koolaid.
Trample the injured and hurdle the dead.