flushdrew42
Well-Known Member
to keep it from melting?
that was at least my thought.
i'm BIAB on my electric stovetop.
that was at least my thought.
i'm BIAB on my electric stovetop.
to keep it from melting?
that was at least my thought.
i'm BIAB on my electric stovetop.
that's the stuff I use.. it's perfect and lets you crush REAL fine
I want to do 5 gallon batches (so I'd like to net about 5.5 gallons of wort in the fermentation vessel). My largest kettle is 36 quarts (9 gallons), and I'm not in a position right now to upgrade. It seems unlikely that I could mash a significant amount of grain with 7.5 gallons of water in such a pot, though I have no problem with boiling that much.
Your 9 gallon pot should be large enough for a full volume BIAB style mash. The rackers calculator link, Can I Mash it? http://rackers.org/calcs.shtml/ indicates w/ a 14lb grain bill at 2 qt/lb, total mash volume is 8.12 gallons. 14 lb of grain will absorb about 1 1/2 gallons so that should leave you 6.5 gallons preboil. If you do a large beer w/ a much larger grain bill, I would suggest a dunk sparge of the bag in either another pot or a bucket, even a cold water dunk and stir the grain sparge will produce quality wort. Adding fresh water, (no need to preheat or sanitize), to the boil kettle is really a last alternative w/ all grain brewing, best to use any water added to rinse the grain in some manner to improve efficiency.
CthulhuDreaming said:I apologize in advance if this question has already been answered. I read through many pages, but couldn't bring myself to read all 59. I am not experienced in all-grain brewing.
I want to do 5 gallon batches (so I'd like to net about 5.5 gallons of wort in the fermentation vessel). My largest kettle is 36 quarts (9 gallons), and I'm not in a position right now to upgrade. It seems unlikely that I could mash a significant amount of grain with 7.5 gallons of water in such a pot, though I have no problem with boiling that much.
So I was thinking about what I could do to work around my kettle limitation and thought of a couple of possibilities:
1. Mash using the no-sparge process with a reduced volume of water (reduced only as much as was necessary), and then top up with (pre-heated?) sanitized water?
2. Mash with a reduced volume of water, put the grain bag in a strainer/collander over the kettle at mash-out, and rinse/sparge/top-up with 170F water?
To my inexperienced mind, it would seem that either would work, provided the grain bill wasn't too big for the mash water volume.
Are there any special considerations to keep in mind were I to take either approach?
Hey guys - looking to try my first BIAB barleywine. I've got 3 successful BIAB batches done and would really like to brew something my brew partner would enjoy (i.e. MALTY). Please let me know what you think of the changes, keeping in mind I'm limited to an 11g kettle.
Note: I basically only reduced the pale malt by 2 lbs due to kettle size. I probably need to reduce the hops a bit also. Haven't thought about that yet.
Cool idea, I've been thinking about trying a barleywine ever since I sampled my first SN Bigfoot a couple of weeks ago.
I guess my initial thoughts/concerns would be about the massive grain-bill and your kettle size. I don't have any exact numbers handy but I'd be more comfortable using a 15-gallon kettle for this big of a beer. Although maybe you could make it work with your 11-gallon kettle...
Definitely lower the base malt grain and use a lot of dry extract to hit your OG. That's what a majority of people do when they are limited on grain space. Should help your efficiency a lot. Let us know how it turns out.