The present invention relates generally to a system and method of a home beer brewing process, and more specifically to a carboy and system for use with home beer brewing.
Conventional beer making methods, especially for the home brewing market, require the purchase of specific beer making equipment and supplies which can include: a kettle and an adjacent burner kit; chillers, fermentor, carboy or other container; bottling bucket, and cleaners, sanitizers, brushes and other cleaning equipment; tubing for siphoning and bottling; beer bottles, caps and a bottle capper; malted barley or extracts or other cereal grains; hops, yeast and other accessories and ingredients dependent on the specific beer recipe.
The brewing process includes the steps of making wort by soaking grains in water to release malt sugars—alternatively previously made dry or liquid extract can be used, boiling the wort and water together with the hops and cooling the wort after boiling; and fermenting the cooled wort for a predetermined period of time in a primary fermentation process by adding yeast to the wort. A large bottle also known as a carboy with a relatively narrow neck and opening as shown in
After the fermentation process is completed, the wort is transferred from the carboy to consumer drinking bottles that are capped. The carboy must be cleaned to remove the krausen ring that forms during fermentation as well as settled yeast and solids that settle out or adhere to the internal sides and bottom of the carboy. A typical method for cleaning the inside of a carboy involves using a specially designed brush which can penetrate all the way to the bottom of the bottle and can be bent or adjusted to clean the sides as well. Another cleaning method involves inserting a rag with cleaner and shaking vigorously. After the carboy is cleaned and sanitized it is generally inverted to drain the residual liquid in the carboy. Prior to the next use, the carboy is sanitized.
In some instances, a home brewer may have multiple carboys for brewing various beers and he/she may also have numerous extra carboys that require storage. Typical home beer brewing carboys are about 5 to 6.5 gallons each, so space requirements for storage and brewing can be a problem. Moreover transfer, movement and general handling of these relatively large carboys whether empty or filled with wort can present logistical problems.
There is a desire and a need for improvements in home beer brewing carboy systems especially for cleaning, brewing, drying and space considerations for brewing and storage of the carboys.
The above and other aspects of various embodiments of the present invention will become apparent in view of the following description, claims and drawing.
For fermentation of wort during home beer brewing, a food grade plastic or glass cylindrical bottle is used which includes: materials (1) to reduce or eliminate UV light transmission through the bottle; and (2) to minimize oxygen ingress into the bottle during fermentation. The bottle includes a flared neck gradually widening in circumference when approaching a bottle opening surrounded by a rim. The opening has dimensions capable of allowing a hand and arm inside the bottle for cleaning. The neck of the bottle includes: external screwing threads adjacent to the bottle opening; one or more flanges positioned along a body of the bottle for bottle handling; a punted or conical bottom for wort and yeast separation during home beer brewing; and volume markers positioned on a side of the bottle for volume measurement.
Additionally, the bottle has a two piece lid including a lid insert and a nylon ring. The circular food grade plastic or glass lid insert engages the bottle adjacent to and along the rim for covering an area corresponding to the opening and the rim. The nylon ring, which screws onto the external screwing threads of the bottle, includes a lip to be tightened against the lid insert along the rim onto the screwing threads. The lid insert includes one or more tapered cylindrical pipe sections to form bung holes whereby each pipe section is molded to protrude above a plane of the lid insert and each pipe section facilitates connection or insertion of home beer brewing hoses or bungs to the pipe section. Tightening of the nylon ring onto the external screwing threads along the flared neck provides a gasket-free water-tight seal.
A carboy system can also include a single-piece dryer/stacker having a lower circular support flange section and a circular upper support system. The lower circular support flange section is connected to an external cylindrical wall having one or more external wall openings to allow connection of the hoses onto the pipe sections of the lid insert and traversal of the hoses outside of the stacker during the home beer brewing process and to allow air movement through the one or more external wall openings and throughout the bottle opening when the lid insert is removed and the bottles are drying. The circular upper support system has protruding tower supports spaced apart and fixedly attached there between by support sections. The tower supports have top angled sections and a common cylindrical wall of the tower supports extends downwards within the dryer/stacker to a form a disk shaped ring having a circular opening. The circular upper support system snuggly fits and engages the bottle neck during bottle stacking During bottle storage, beer fermentation or bottle drying, the lower circular support flange section engages a bottom of a first bottle and the circular upper support system engages a second bottle to stack the first and second bottle in a circumferential footprint of one bottle.
In the following description, specific details are set forth although it should be appreciated by one of ordinary skill that the systems and methods can be practiced without at least some of the details. In some instances, known features or processes are not described in detail so as not to obscure the present invention.
The flared bottle neck includes external screwing threads 52 molded onto the external neck bottle surface surrounding the opening 36 which is large enough to allow a hand and a portion of an arm inside the bottle for cleaning The diameter D1 of the opening 36 can vary so long as a person's hand and arm is able to reach into the bottle for cleaning. An exemplary opening diameter D1 is about 14.0 centimeters or 5½ inches. Also the diameter of the bottle body 54 and the diameter of the neck 24 can be the same in one embodiment.
The carboy system 20 includes a two piece lid 50 having a circular lid insert 38 and a ring 30.
PET was chosen as the preferred plastic material to minimize oxygen ingress into the bottle during. Additives have been included in the PET carboy to reduce or eliminate UV light transmission through the bottle. This helps to maintain the integrity of the beer, Glass does not allow oxygen to penetrate the through minimize oxygen ingress into the bottle during fermentation
The lid insert 38 portion of the lid 50 is a circular component as viewed from the top (see
The nylon ring 30 portion of the lid 50 is structured with a protruding lip 48 that matches to a contour of the top edge or rim 56 of the bottle at the bottle opening. In order to secure the lid 50 onto the bottle, first the lid insert 38 is placed onto the opening 36 so that the lower section 44 of the lid insert 38 lines up and engages to the rim 56. Then the nylon ring 30 is placed over the lid insert 38, turned and tightened so that the internal threads 32 of the ring 30 engage with the bottle threads 52, whereby the top edge or protruding lip 48 of the ring 30 is drawn tight against the lid insert 38 to secure the lid 50 onto the bottle as shown in
The carboy dryer/stacker 70 is illustrated in
The lower circular support ring or flange 86 flares outwards and gradually becoming wider as shown in the figures in order to accommodate and fit snugly together with a bottom 72 of a bottle 20 when bottles are stacked one upon another as shown in
As described above, multiple home beer brewing bottles 20 can be stacked on top of one another in a single footprint which is the circumference of the body of one bottle.
Bottles can also be stacked for brewing as shown in
The carboy dryer/stacker 70 can stack bottles with either the lids 50 screwed onto the bottles, or with the lids removed for drying. Also, when bottles are not in use for brewing or drying, they can be stacked in a single bottle footprint using carboy dryer/stackers.
While the invention has been shown and described with reference to specific embodiments, it should be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and detail may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.