snow is a great wort chiller | HomeBrewTalk.com - Beer, Wine, Mead, & Cider Brewing Discussion Community.

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk by donating:

  1. Dismiss Notice
  2. We have a new forum and it needs your help! Homebrewing Deals is a forum to post whatever deals and specials you find that other homebrewers might value! Includes coupon layering, Craigslist finds, eBay finds, Amazon specials, etc.
    Dismiss Notice

snow is a great wort chiller

Discussion in 'All Grain & Partial Mash Brewing' started by Jamming, Jan 22, 2012.

 

  1. #1
    Jamming

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 22, 2012
    :mug:

    DSCN2167.jpg

    DSCN2166.jpg
     
  2. #2
    Doed

    Belching Dog Brewery

    Posted Jan 23, 2012
    is that a submersible pump? what brand and horsepower/size is it? where did you get it? i'm thinking of doing this exact same thing, recirculating ice water through my immersion chiller.
     
  3. #3
    pelipen

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 23, 2012
    I want to do this too and keep using the same water re-frozen. My CFC is a water waster. Even if it does water the lawn.
     
  4. #4
    Zixxer10R

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 23, 2012
    You could just run your CFC output into a bucket and recirc from there with a sump pump. Same concept, except you still get to use the CFC, which chills much better than an immersion chiller.
     
  5. #5
    broadbill

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 23, 2012
    Keep in mind that you'll be storing was amounts to 5-6 bags of ice (at least) if you decide to go this route.
     
  6. #6
    pelipen

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 23, 2012
    Thats likely what I'll do. I didn't mean adapt a cooler, just use a pump to recirc chilled water. My freezer is full of frozen water bottles, i'll just keep those cycling.
    I'm just not sure if it would be efficient enough. There is a lot of heat energy in 6 gallons of boiling wort. My water is super cheap, I just hate to waste it.
     
  7. #7
    Airplanedoc

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 23, 2012
    Ahh yes snow, I had forgotten what that looked like. We have hardly had more than a few flurries this year.
     
  8. #8
    geer537

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 23, 2012
    My advice on this in order to cut down on the amount of ice you need on hand is to start chilling the water in your cooler at the onset of brewday. Begin your cool down with your CFC or Immersion Chiller as normal then transfer to recirculating at about 100-110. I use an immersion chiller and can get the wort to 100 pretty quickly but it slows down after that. Then I'll hook the immersion chiller up to the pump submerged in ice water and let it go until the desired temps. Either way you would be wasting a lot of ice or a lot of water. If snow is abundant you're set. For me I guess I kind of use a hybrid technique since I don't get snow.
     
  9. #9
    Doed

    Belching Dog Brewery

    Posted Jan 24, 2012
    Airplanedoc - I like your "location" description...Peoples Republic of Chicago...I feel the same way.

    To everyone: I originally asked what size/horsepower rating was being used on the sump pump. I have looked at a few online and some of the ratings make me wonder if they will work for this application. In the OP's picture it appears that he is not using a garden hose adaptor and therefore it must be a smaller size pump.

    I just wanted to get an idea about what people are using, IF you are recirculating cooling water for your wort after the boil. Right now I am just running good water down the drain and would like to stop wasting water.
     
  10. #10
    geer537

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 24, 2012
    Mine's Basic-

    http://www.harborfreight.com/264-gph-submersible-fountain-pump-68395.html

    Can't beat the price and it is pretty simple. Keep your pot above the cooler and pump set up. There was an adapter that fit my immersion chiller and the side that would normally get hooked up to my garden nose gets put in the water to recirulate. the pump is nothing special, cheap and works.

    But like I said- You're going to need to experiment with wasting a little water first anyways. If not you will be dumping 210 degree water on ice and that will heat your ice bath up quick. Then you are scrambling to put a lot more ice hot water. Your efforts are then spent keeping that ice bath cooled instead of cooling your wort.
     
  11. #11
    Doed

    Belching Dog Brewery

    Posted Jan 24, 2012
    I gotcha. I could run regular garden hose water through and catch the heated water in my clean up wash tub until the water starts to run through cool, then connect the pump to run ice water through the chiller and recirculate the ice water.
     
  12. #12
    geer537

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 24, 2012
    It's a solid plan! If you come up with something better to save water, let us know. I have been racking my brain and am always looking for better, faster ways to chill.

    I also still whirlpool while the wort is chilling using the recirculation to help speed it up.
     
  13. #13
    BOBTHEukBREWER

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 24, 2012
    Uk brewers usually only cool down to 30 deg C before pitching the yeast. Put your cooling coil in a sink of cold water and run the wort through the coil, twice is usually enough.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page

Group Builder