BeerFYI

Equipment & Setup

Measurement Tools

2 min read تم التحديث مارس 03, 2026

Measure Twice, Brew Once

Precision in measurement translates directly to consistency in beer. Invest in quality measurement tools and calibrate them regularly.

Digital Scale

A kitchen scale accurate to 1 gram is essential for weighing grain, hops, yeast nutrient, and brewing salts. For measuring hops in small increments (0.25 oz additions), a jeweler's scale accurate to 0.1 g is useful. Weigh everything — do not rely on volume measurements for solid ingredients.

Thermometer

Instant-read digital (Thermapen, ThermoWorks) — fast, accurate (+/- 0.5 F), and responsive. Essential for monitoring mash temperature, strike water, and cooling wort. Calibrate in ice water (32 F) and boiling water (212 F at sea level) before each brew day.

Dial thermometer — inexpensive and durable but slower to respond. Adequate for monitoring but not for precision mashing.

Temperature probe/data logger — records temperature over time. Useful for monitoring fermentation temperature remotely.

Hydrometer

A glass instrument that measures liquid density. Essential for determining original gravity (OG), final gravity (FG), and calculating ABV and attenuation.

Reading tips: Spin to dislodge bubbles. Read at the bottom of the meniscus. Correct for temperature (calibrated at 60 or 68 F). Draw a sample — do not put the hydrometer in the fermenter.

Refractometer

Measures gravity from a few drops of wort on a prism. Instant results, minimal sample size. Excellent for pre-boil and OG readings.

Critical limitation: Alcohol changes the refractive index. Refractometer readings in fermented beer must be corrected using an online calculator. Many brewers use a refractometer for OG and a hydrometer for FG.

pH Meter

Covered in detail in the pH Meters guide. Essential for water chemistry and mash optimization.

Timer

A reliable timer (phone, kitchen timer, or brewing app) for tracking mash rest duration, boil time, and hop addition schedules. Missed hop additions or over-extended rests affect the beer.

Volume Markings

Accurate volume markings on your kettle and fermenter help you track pre-boil volume, post-boil volume, and final batch size. If your kettle does not have markings, calibrate with a measured gallon jug and mark levels with a Sharpie.

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