The purpose of the basket to me is ease of use. The bag I made is very strong and properly fits my kettle. It can hold 35lbs+ and has very strong handles too. The reason I like the basket is I can keep it suspended over the kettle, while giving a little sparge water to the bag, with the water returning directly to the kettle not pouring all over the place because the bag has expanded past the width of the kettle. Ileave the bag to drip dry over the kettle for about 10 minutes before I discard of the grains.
To both wildcat and lonetexan, you both are saying you use a voile cloth bag in your kettle while leaving the element on? No burn marks whatsoever? Lonetexan, I know you mentioned you leave it at 5% manual, do you know what temp that is? Wildcat, what do you leave your temp at? I was thinking of while running my recirc to leave it at the mash tmep I require. I would think 154* would do some damage to voile (believe it's nylon) cloth.
I guess that using the bag in the basket would make it easier to do a sparge rinse of the grains. But why would you NEED to do that? I just string up the bag and let it hang over the kettle while it is coming up to boil. Sometimes I'll give it a good twist and/or squeeze to speed the draining up a little bit. You will not likely get any better efficiency by doing the "sparge" unless you have a really big grain bill.
As far as the PID setting on manual at 5%, there is not a specific temp setting. The PID is essentially turning the element on for 5% of the time and off 95%. This helps maintain the mash temp. So, using the pump to recirculate during the ramp up to mash temp of 156 then dropping in the grains will put me at mash temp of 150-151. Leave the pump off and mash in with your paddle, then set the pid to manual at 5%. I have played with the settings from 5% to 10% and 5% tends to maintain the temp without the temp creeping up.
The voile bag I am using is made from a sheer curtain from walmart. No, there has not been any issue with burning/scorching of the bag. The only time I had an issue was when using the pump to recirculate during the mash and the pump was pulling too fast creating an air pocket under the bag. The bag itself did not burn/scorch, the wort on the element caramelized/burnt. This is why I have stopped recirculating during the mash.
The pump is now just used during ramp up to mash temp and then to recirculate during chilling and then to whirlpool. In reality, I could get by without the pump, it would just mean more stirring.
I typically get 80-85% mash efficiency into the boil kettle and 70-75% overall brewhouse efficiency. This is not just with 1 or 2 batches, but with at least 80-100 gallons in the past year or so.
Bottom line is, if you want to use the basket and it works for you, use the basket. If you don't want to, then don't. The great thing is you will have beer at the end of the day.
