Oktober Homebrew Can Seamer Review and Field Test

I honestly have never bottled a batch of homebrew. I went straight into kegging to avoid the cleaning and sanitizing of 50+ bottles. Setting up a bottle filler and CO2 purge station always seemed like a huge pain in the ass compared to just sanitizing and filling a keg. I already owned a kegerator, so kegs just were the obvious choice.

I noticed canning machines popping up in brewpubs about 4-5 years ago. These small machines allow customers to take home a crowler of their favorite brew. Cans offer a few benefits that bottles do not, so I always wished there were an affordable homebrew canner for small batch brewers. Guess what? My wish was granted.

Oktober approached me with one of their early 12 oz / 16 oz canning prototypes and then ultimately sent over their Oktober Can Seamer SL1 for testing. As I thought through the pros and cons of canning vs bottling or kegging, I immediately saw some areas where canning would be worth the extra time.

Pros of Canning Your Homebrew

  1. 1 Accepted in areas where glass bottles are not allowed
  2. 2 Stackable (Saves space in fridges and coolers)
  3. 3 Crushable (Save space in the recycle bin)
  4. 4 Easier to hide (Coozy covers you up where bottles leave you exposed)
  5. 5 Cans block light and oxygen
  6. 6 Cans cool down faster than glass bottles

So, why did I decide to take a deeper dive into canning my homebrew? In addition to the pros just mentioned, the idea of canning just seems new and cool.

Most all my favorite commercial craft beers are now being canned. If you look at the beer shelves these days the old "can stigma" is long gone. It's not just PBW and Natty Light you find in cans anymore and what's left on the shelf sold in bottles almost feels like an old relic to me. Sure, there are still some amazing craft beer offerings sold in bottles (Bells, Russian River, Founders, etc.), but smaller breweries use cans and beautiful designs to stand out.

Hello Darkness My Old Friend

Blocking out the light and O2 are really what pushed me over the edge into canning. I love the fact that I can can a beer that took me a year to make (barrel aged something or other) and it can be can conditioned further without risk of a light struck reaction or oxygen getting through and staling out all that hard work.

Let's take a test drive of the canner, shall we?

Unboxing the Oktober Homebrew Can Seamer

Here is the SL1 Homebrew Canning Machine and the big box of cans and lids

Here's the instruction manual and additional parts


Oktober provides a big tube of lube for the canner and the 12 oz can riser chuck that easily snaps on when needed.

Here's how I cleaned and sanitized my cans

Here's how I setup my filling and CO2 purge station


The cans were purged with CO2 using thr Blichmann Beer Gun and slowly filled to the top. A sanitized can lid is added and quickly sealed with a few strokes of the canner. (And YES that is a metal toilet paper rack my CO2 tank and Beer Gun are resting in. Makes a great holder for my can filling setup.)

Here's how the first round of canning went


Something you should NOT do is try and seal the cans without filling them first. These cans were run through the machine without being filled and you can see that they didn't do well.

Here's how the second round of canning went

What I can use this homebrew canner for...

Beer
Wine
Soda
Sake
Kombucha
Cider
Mead
Water
Cold Brew Coffee
Mixers
Starter Wort

Final Thoughts

Having used other canners on the market, I'm very impressed by the quality, accuracy and level of detail the SL1 can seamer brings to the table. By far the coolest "bonus" of this machine, for me, is the ability to can your own starter wort for yeast propagation. Just for fun I filled a can with toasted oak cubes and whiskey. After 2-3 months I can pop the top and pour the whiskey straight into a Porter or Stout for added flavor. The options are limitless with what you can CAN!

The Oktober Design Homebrew Canner SL1 has changed the way I think about "bottling". Before using this canner, the idea of individually bottling my beer seemed like way too much work for little reward. The electric can seamer makes quick work of this task now and is very easy to use.

Something to Consider

The machine has a small footprint (which rocks), but the box of cans waiting to be filled is rather large (50+ cans). Make sure you have plenty of storage space to store your blanks.