OK, now, before we start: Please do not immediately tromp all over my ideas without due consideration...
I have been reading up & watching videos on a LOT of different methods to do my brew the way I can and/or need to. My little brain, all on it's own, came up with something that could work for ME & MY setup, equipment, etc...
I cannot go out and buy myself a 10 gallon, or even a 5 gallon, pot to do my mashing, I plan on maybe 3-4 batches a year due to my mead making habit. I have no way to heat 5 or 10 gallons of water to a FULL BOIL, my little stove has a hard enough time with bringing 3 gallons to a full boil. I cannot afford a burner, pot, wort chiller, etc, so I will just have to make do with what I have on hand. What I have on hand that I'm thinking about are these: 3 gallon pot, 5 gallon carboy, 8 gallon fermentor, massive amounts of time, very limited funds, limitless imagination...
My solution to this: Sanitize a 5 gallon carboy, make as large of a BIAB wort as I can, put in 5 gallon carboy when cooled, make another batch of wort, add both to fermentor, pitch yeast.
I see no problem with this if my sanitation is impeccable, I know of a guy on another site that pitched his yeast, then waited for fermentation. When said fermentation did not kick off right away he waited as he was told to expect a long lag time. He waited 6 weeks before writing and saying that there were still no signs of any fermentation. He never opened the fermentor after pitching his yeast. And after 6 weeks I would expect SOMETHING to happen, nope, zilch, zero, nada. So I can extrapolate from that that I can safely wait a day or two if needed between mashing a couple batches. As long as I'm scrupulously clean that is!
There is also the possibility of rinsing the grains (not a true sparge so rinse seems more appropriate) by putting them into a colander and pouring my additional water for my boil over them, already heated to ~168ºF.
Does that sound practical or am I just full of suds??
I have been reading up & watching videos on a LOT of different methods to do my brew the way I can and/or need to. My little brain, all on it's own, came up with something that could work for ME & MY setup, equipment, etc...
I cannot go out and buy myself a 10 gallon, or even a 5 gallon, pot to do my mashing, I plan on maybe 3-4 batches a year due to my mead making habit. I have no way to heat 5 or 10 gallons of water to a FULL BOIL, my little stove has a hard enough time with bringing 3 gallons to a full boil. I cannot afford a burner, pot, wort chiller, etc, so I will just have to make do with what I have on hand. What I have on hand that I'm thinking about are these: 3 gallon pot, 5 gallon carboy, 8 gallon fermentor, massive amounts of time, very limited funds, limitless imagination...
My solution to this: Sanitize a 5 gallon carboy, make as large of a BIAB wort as I can, put in 5 gallon carboy when cooled, make another batch of wort, add both to fermentor, pitch yeast.
I see no problem with this if my sanitation is impeccable, I know of a guy on another site that pitched his yeast, then waited for fermentation. When said fermentation did not kick off right away he waited as he was told to expect a long lag time. He waited 6 weeks before writing and saying that there were still no signs of any fermentation. He never opened the fermentor after pitching his yeast. And after 6 weeks I would expect SOMETHING to happen, nope, zilch, zero, nada. So I can extrapolate from that that I can safely wait a day or two if needed between mashing a couple batches. As long as I'm scrupulously clean that is!
There is also the possibility of rinsing the grains (not a true sparge so rinse seems more appropriate) by putting them into a colander and pouring my additional water for my boil over them, already heated to ~168ºF.
Does that sound practical or am I just full of suds??