Reddit Reddit reviews Winware Professional Aluminum 60 Quart Stockpot

We found 2 Reddit comments about Winware Professional Aluminum 60 Quart Stockpot. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Kitchen & Dining
Kitchen Cookware
Stockpots
Home & Kitchen
Steamers, Stock & Pasta Pots
Pots & Pans
Winware Professional Aluminum 60 Quart Stockpot
Dimensions: 17.3 diameter x 16 depthDesigned for professional use in preparing stocks, soups, and liquidsMade with standard weight heavy aluminum, with a reinforced rimProduct Gauge: 3/16 (4.75mm), NSF ListedCover sold separately
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2 Reddit comments about Winware Professional Aluminum 60 Quart Stockpot:

u/Z-and-I · 1 pointr/Homebrewing

Well with both of them you are still going to have to buy stuff. Truthfully you need items from both. The first one you still need a way to boil your wort. And the second you need fermentation vessels. That being said the 2nd ad is all quality stuff at a decent price.

What is your price range? What are you looking to do for brewing. Im confident you could build a mashtun, buy a burner, and a pot for $200. You might be able to get some icing buckets from a local bakery to ferment in.

EDIT: Check out this stock pot this cooler and this burner. Build yourself a valve/bazooka screen for the cooler and find something to ferment in, an auto siphon with bottling wand, capper and caps, and you are good to go. Scale it down if you want but being in the gulf I'm sure you could use all of it for crawfish boils if you find you don't like to brew.

EDIT2: I didn't see the first guy included a pot. That would be the cheapest way to break into the hobby. Im kinda gear crazy right now so don't let me freak you out with expensive shit.

u/hello_josh · 1 pointr/Homebrewing

Sidebar has some good stuff ->

I would say, don't bother starting with less than 5 gallon batches. You are going to work just as hard for so little beer. Get a cheap 15 gallon pot and you'll be set for life (stainless or aluminum). You can start will full boil extract and move to all-grain brew-in-a-bag for the cost of a mesh bag.