Thermometer
Thermometer
I have been using two thermometers that I got from Wilko. The other day I used them together and they were 10 degrees Celcius apart and I have no idea which one is right. This might explain why all my beers are quite thin. (had a similar experience transferring "10 liters" of liquid between fermenters so it might also be that). Anyway, can anyone recommend a good thermometer? Are the glass ones accurate?
- I_used_to_brew
- Posts: 2356
- Joined: Sat Nov 20, 2010 1:06 pm
Re: Thermometer
Thermometers vary a lot, without calibration it is difficult to know what reading is what. Alcohol (glass) thermometers can be calibrated, but would need the use of an offset table to use them if the fixed scale is out.
I have, however, found these https://www.thermometersuperstore.co.uk ... -safe.html to be accurate, cheap and waterproof. They can also be easily calibrated.
I have, however, found these https://www.thermometersuperstore.co.uk ... -safe.html to be accurate, cheap and waterproof. They can also be easily calibrated.
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- Posts: 107
- Joined: Fri Feb 08, 2013 7:15 pm
Re: Thermometer
... and the other advantage of electronic ones is they can't shatter.
Glass of beer = Good
Glass in beer = A&E
Glass of beer = Good
Glass in beer = A&E
- I_used_to_brew
- Posts: 2356
- Joined: Sat Nov 20, 2010 1:06 pm
Re: Thermometer
And another big plus is being able to cook meet to a temperature using the same thermometer, no more tough joints :)beerbulger wrote:... and the other advantage of electronic ones is they can't shatter.
Glass of beer = Good
Glass in beer = A&E
Re: Thermometer
When a man is tired of beer, he is tired of life; for there is in beer all that life can afford
Re: Thermometer
I bought a Thermapen ages ago for brewing, but it gets just as much use checking food is cooked properly now than with brewing. IIRC it was about £30 on Ebay which is half price albeit today (Black Friday) they have Green or Pink ones at £24
Regards Nic
http://forum.craftbrewing.org.uk/
http://forum.craftbrewing.org.uk/