MaryB
Well-Known Member
Tuesdays brew session was 6 hours start to finish. I weighed everything the day before but ran out of time to prefill the mash tun and HLT with water and to crush the malt so did it on brew day. That added about 20 minutes.
Lead Software Engineer. Though my PM sucks so yeah I mostly do her work for her.
I know this isn't exactly on topic, but is anyone doing 10-11 gallons all gravity-fed (i.e. no pumps)? I want to move to 11 gallon batches (5.5g now), but not wanting to buy any pumps until I go all electric. As it is, I have to lift my kettle after sparging to get it onto the burner. Don't think that's gonna work with 10g batches.
I took the advice here, and I brewed my first 10 gallon all grain batch today. I didn't run a stop watch, but I came in about 30-45 minutes longer than my last 5 gallon batch. I attribute that to the fact that it took that much longer for the larger volume of wort to come to a boil.
Another funny thing happened. I got a new weldless kettle to heat sparge water in, and the weldless fittings leaked like a sieve. By the time I got them stopped, by scrounging old gaskets from my cooler HLT, the mash was over and I hadn't even begun to heat my sparge water.
The mash was perfect and the first running were right on target.
So I thought ... oh crap, what now? Then, inspiration. I read about cold water batch sparging on this site, so what the heck, I'll try it! Batch sparged as usual, but with cold water. The way my system is set up I was able to run it through my herms coil and get it up to about 100F on the single pass.
Sparged to my boil volume and checked gravity, expecting the worst. What do you know I was over my numbers! Expected a preboil gravity of 1.039 and I was at 1.044.
The whole batch came in a couple of points high post boil, but the volumes were right on, the plate chiller didn't clog, and I was happy to have two full fermenters.
So, according to beersmith, my screw up cold water sparge yielded me my best efficiency to date.
What on earth? lol
All good ideas above, I would suggest a one gallon plastic pitcher. Rather than lifting buckets and pouring 4 gallons to your kettle, just do it a gallon at a time.
Moving 6-8 gallons of wort or sparge water with a gallon pitcher is easy and takes about a minute, less time than hooking and unhooking and cleaning a pump.
I've brewed all sorts of large batches up to 15 gallons without a pump, just grab the pitcher and bail.....one batch I recall I had to bail chilled wort out of the kettle to the fermenters with a sanitized pitcher, aerated along the way no charge.....
Ghetto yes, but simple easy and effective.![]()
No home brewery should be without a 1 gal Rubbermaid pitcher, aka poor mans pump.
While I can certainly afford to buy a pump, I don't want the exercise involved hooking up hoses and cleaning flushing etc etc
Pumps are great, lots of people love and swear by them, but they are not labor free by any means IMO.
I was taught to add low heat to my BK as soon as I had an inch or so of wort from my first runnings. Them when I start draining my sparge i turn the heat up and once my MLT is drained or I reach my pre-boil volume I really turn it up and it boils fairly quickly. You just need to watch your hot break and be ready to turn the heat down to avoid a boil over.When your sparge is 1/2 to 3/4 of the way done start your boil burner and get the kettle heating. Shaves about 20 minutes off my day that way.
I was taught to add low heat to my BK as soon as I had an inch or so of wort from my first runnings. Them when I start draining my sparge i turn the heat up and once my MLT is drained or I reach my pre-boil volume I really turn it up and it boils fairly quickly. You just need to watch your hot break and be ready to turn the heat down to avoid a boil over.
I was taught to add low heat to my BK as soon as I had an inch or so of wort from my first runnings. Them when I start draining my sparge i turn the heat up and once my MLT is drained or I reach my pre-boil volume I really turn it up and it boils fairly quickly. You just need to watch your hot break and be ready to turn the heat down to avoid a boil over.
Don't have a picture on here's, but I do 11gallon batches gravity flow. Took some considering, but I turn my work truck into a brew truck. Put a scaffold plank on the ladder rack and a folding stage on top of that. Brew kettle never leaves the burner till cleanup. Burner sits in the bed, mash tun gets gravity filled with strike water only, then hoisted up on the plank and the grain added. Sparge water gets heated and run into a HLT cooler which gets hoisted up onto the folding plank. From that point on, it's all downhill. The only heavy lifting is done with coolers, so there's less risk of injury with hot stuff.I know this isn't exactly on topic, but is anyone doing 10-11 gallons all gravity-fed (i.e. no pumps)? I want to move to 11 gallon batches (5.5g now), but not wanting to buy any pumps until I go all electric. As it is, I have to lift my kettle after sparging to get it onto the burner. Don't think that's gonna work with 10g batches.
I have resisted going full all-grain because it seems to be a lot to do alone. Due to my schedule and that of my friends, we are not able to get together as often as we'd like to brew, so I usually end up just doing an extract batch after putting the kids to bed. I have an all-grain setup with pump and plate chiller, so in theory it should be easy. I am skeptical though, and don't want to get into a 7 hour ordeal before realizing I have made a poor choice.
For those of you who do all-grain alone, what are your tips and secrets?
I brew alone. One question: None clean the Pot and other items BEFORE using them?
I brew alone. One question: None clean the Pot and other items BEFORE using them?