I bet your element is fine, what happened to your pump?
I got my containers yesterday. I ordered two of these:
5 Gal UN Approved Plastic Carboys - US Plastic Corporation
Nice, they have great products, I assume that you then plan to transfer to another vessel to ferment.
I did what I am going to call a "RWS" It stands for Real Wort Starter.
Basically this is what I did.
Prior to transferring my hot wort to the container, I drained 1 qt into a SS sauce pan. I chilled it in a cold water bath, and took my OG.
Once I did this, I poured the OG sample wort back into the sauce pan and boiled it again to make sure it was good and sterile.
Then cooled in a cool water bath to 65F and transferred to a 1 gal. carboy.
I rehydrated my S-05 as usual in warm water, then transferred it into my 1 gal. carboy to make my 24-hour starter.
No DME, and the yeasties get accustomed to the same worth they are going to get pitched into, tomorrow!
Pol, just curious, why did you make a starter for the S-05 vs just re-hydrating the dry yeast prior to pitching? was it to reduce possibility of adaption issues in the fermenter?
What was the OG of your RWS?
I was thinking (OMG) , I have a refractometer and could take readings during the latter half of the boil cycle and pull the RWS amount when it reached ~1.040 and cool in the sanitized starter flask. That would reduce a couple of the steps you went through.
FWIW... I am JOKING. This hydro sample tastes JUST like all of the other CCB Haus Ales I brewed. All of the numbers match for attenuation and such. I don't see a reason to ever chill my beer again, thus far.
Darn, I REALLY love cooked corn!
I really like this idea, though putting 200+deg wort into my glass carboys does not turn me on, handling and such. As summer approaches it will take longer for the wort to cool while in the keggle than fall winter and spring. Any ideas?
#1 you NEVER put hot liquids in glass. This is why I had to source the HDPE fermentor.
#2 the wort doesnt cool in the keggle, the HDPE container cooled in my house, so the season (winter, fall, summer) will not matter. If I really wanted to cool it "faster" I could place it in my ferment. fridge at say 63F and that would help.
There is a benefit to getting it into the container while it is hot.
#1. Cooling between 140 and 80 is PRIME time for critters to enter into your wort that you do not want.
#2. The hot wort further sterilizes the fermentor.
#3. It is not sitting out in the open long at all, much less time than if you actually chill it.
Those are a couple of the reasons that I did, what I did.
hmm.... so what is a safe temperature to transfer to a glass carboy?
Um, I dunno... but Id say less than 140F. Probably depends on the glass, but that just scares me. ALSO when the wort cools, it shrinks, along with the headpsace. I am not sure what a vaccuum will do to your glass carboy.