mgortel
Well-Known Member
Is stirring of the wort prior to pitching yeast adequate to aerate the wort for All-Grain brewing or should I be using an aerator?
Thanks!
Mike
Thanks!
Mike
Can you guys recommend a aeration "system"...off the shelf.....
A Mixstir and a drill is every bit as effective in results as an expensive O2 system.
http://www.midwestsupplies.com/mix-stir-agitator-rod.html
Not true. The most vigorous air-only aeration system (mix-stir, aquarium pump, venturi) can only get you up to about 6-8 PPM dO2 and that takes a lot of darn work with air only. A minute with pure O2 and you're at the optimal 10ppm dO2. Plus, that mix stir is almost twenty bucks, and that's if you already own a drill. For forty more you can be using pure O2.
dbrewski said:I have heard, and it makes sense, that in order to keep those aeration stones clean you need to turn on the O2 before you put it into the wort, that way the pressure keeps the wort from working into the pores. If it gets in there and gets caked up you might have it pop off as one poster states, or infections, or just plain clogged. I just got mine, I have not used it so I am just passing along what I heard.
Denny said:Based on results, it's equally effective. If it wasn't I would have stopped using it yeats ago.
theveganbrewer said:Every scientific research report ive read has said pure O2 is the only way to get over 8ppm. Optimal o2 level is 10-12ppm. You can shake and get 8ppm so if you aren't going with pure o2 it is just an effort to save shaking, which in itself is a good reason to get a wine degasser.
Very true.
I would guess that the reason people say they get just as good of results is the oxygen is needed early on for reproduction.
Depending on the OG of the wort and the amount of yeast pitched, the importance of optimal reproduction can vary.
Certainly. I went to pure O2 because the majority of what I brew is over 1.070.
Every scientific research report ive read has said pure O2 is the only way to get over 8ppm. Optimal o2 level is 10-12ppm. You can shake and get 8ppm so if you aren't going with pure o2 it is just an effort to save shaking, which in itself is a good reason to get a wine degasser.
Certainly. I went to pure O2 because the majority of what I brew is over 1.070.
Personally, I seldom measure my beer...I drink it. My results using the MixStir are every bit as good as friends who use O2. What else matters?
when you say MixStir is it one of those paint mixers that attach to a drill? When do you oxygenate with it...in the kettle, or the bucket?