cheesecake
Well-Known Member
Now to breakfast stout I brewed the large batch of is in the bath tub around 68 and that's doing good also. I enjoyed brewing the large batch until cleanup time then I kicked myself. No place to clean it out easily.
This can be scaled down or kept as is for a gallon set up. I would love to do this put electricity scares me.
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/f170/110v-recirculating-ebiab-2-5-gallon-batches-341219/
Yeah, sort of. Having done all grain with a mash tun, even if I did BIAB, I'd want a pump for recirculating the wort while "mashing" and then also for pumping it through the chiller.Brew in a bag is all grain....
That's what I'm in the process of building.
cheesecake said:Fuggle would be a great choice if you want i can throw that into beersmith and adjust the bitterness with the hops you have. Do you know the aa on the fuggles
brewman ! said:Yeah, sort of. Having done all grain with a mash tun, even if I did BIAB, I'd want a pump for recirculating the wort while "mashing" and then also for pumping it through the chiller.
By the time I muck around with a couple kettles, a pump, a chiller and hoses, I've recreated a brew stand on a smaller scale. I might as well brew on the big stand I'm building and throw out what I don't like. I can buy a lot of ingredients for what I'd spend putting together a small system.
Or am I wrong ? Has someone been done this road and have experience to share ? Does anyone have a full on large batch brewstand and still found it very handy to brew 1 gallon batches ?
Thanks !
brewman ! said:One more thing... at the 1-2 gallon batch size, is there anything wrong with putting a pot onto a regular stove burner instead of embedding a hot water heater element into the pot ?
Does anyone know of a good brew pump that is smaller/cheaper than the typical March/Chugger pumps ?
Are you keeping it at the 2.5 gallon volume or going smaller? Do you have an electrical background?
Please have a brewcast when you start using this rig.
Great thing about small batches biab, I am not worried about the 66% rye beer that I am brewing up this week. Would be really hard to stick the sparge on a bag.
Thinking about casting it too. Anybody up around 8am-12ish central on wed thats not working?
So, brewday is upon me and I could use some advice. I just loaded my strike water into my kettle and set up my grain bag, and I've only got about an inch of headspace left in the kettle - am I gonna have room for my grain (about 2.5lbs)?
I'm considering removing about a half gallon of water, then doing a small sparge once the mash-in is overwith and the grain bag has been removed from the main kettle to bring it back up to volume before the boil.
Not worried about any of this, per se - just want to know what the best course of action is. Thanks y'all!
@BigRock: No worries man, but thanks. I was just about to come back and call off the request for advice - I decided to back off a half gallon and sparge after the initial mash to bring it back up to full volume. I'm determined not to take this first batch too seriously, so if it doesn't work out, so be it. I bet it'll be good though.
Now, if y'all will excuse me, I'm gonna go have me a Wookey Jack while my kettle heats up.![]()
So, brewday is upon me and I could use some advice. I just loaded my strike water into my kettle and set up my grain bag, and I've only got about an inch of headspace left in the kettle - am I gonna have room for my grain (about 2.5lbs)?
I'm considering removing about a half gallon of water, then doing a small sparge once the mash-in is overwith and the grain bag has been removed from the main kettle to bring it back up to volume before the boil.
Not worried about any of this, per se - just want to know what the best course of action is. Thanks y'all!
dadshomebrewing said:bottled my Christmas Cranberry today, and for the first time ever i can actually TASTE the different ingredients (including the cranberries).
i haven't decided if i like it, but i can taste them.
now to wait for "time in a bottle".
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huntingohio said:That is entirely possible, I have done something similar.
Youll need 2 pots to do a quasi sparging biab sparging. I put 3.5 quarts in one pot and did the normal steeping, then mash out. I pulled the bag and put it in a colander above the pot to drain while I heated the other pot too steeping temp. I dropped the bag into the other pot and gave it a good stirring to try and get all the sugars out. i gave it a few minutes to rest and removed the bag, combined the pots and hit my preboil exactly. Once i boiled off I had 1.5 gallons, fermented it in a LBK from a mr beer kit. worked out dang near perfect. It only raised my efficency by a couple of percent, not really much but enough to warrant 20 extra minutes.
I have been thinking of buying some of the insulation people use to wrap there keggles to wrap my kettle in, has anyone else tryed this?