Hi guys I'm looking to step up to all grain brewing from extract. I have a few questions before I start spending money,
1. Due to my home environment I will need to use an electric kettle, I was thinking a 30l tea urn (water boiler) any thoughts on this?
2.im trying to make my brew day as quick and as mess free as possible also trying to keep equipment to a minimum, my plan is to mash my grains in my kettle in a bag, then remove the grains to a fermenter, then pour roughly 1gal water over the grains in the fermenter for my sparge, then remove grains add that liquid back to kettle and on with my boil.
I know this is a very basic setup I'm trying to keep it minimal and not an all day project as I have young kids so time is hard to find. Would this method give me enough efficiency from my mash do you think?. I was originally going to make a mash tun out of a cool box, but if I can get the same results from this method it seems a quicker and less mess method.
I have so many questions but this is my starting point for now .
Thanks in advance for any advice you can provide, cheers.
Dean
1. Due to my home environment I will need to use an electric kettle, I was thinking a 30l tea urn (water boiler) any thoughts on this?
2.im trying to make my brew day as quick and as mess free as possible also trying to keep equipment to a minimum, my plan is to mash my grains in my kettle in a bag, then remove the grains to a fermenter, then pour roughly 1gal water over the grains in the fermenter for my sparge, then remove grains add that liquid back to kettle and on with my boil.
I know this is a very basic setup I'm trying to keep it minimal and not an all day project as I have young kids so time is hard to find. Would this method give me enough efficiency from my mash do you think?. I was originally going to make a mash tun out of a cool box, but if I can get the same results from this method it seems a quicker and less mess method.
I have so many questions but this is my starting point for now .
Thanks in advance for any advice you can provide, cheers.
Dean