mb82
Well-Known Member
Maintaining temps. The bag is a filter and catches what what need to be caught.
That's a nice looking bag Antler. I need to find something like that over on this side of the pond. How long do these bags last and are they a PITA to clean?
A caution here. Most extract and partial mash kits have explicit instructions to NOT squeeze the grains. They have calculated the efficiencies and resulting flavor profiles assuming you do not squeeze. If you DO squeeze, you will get "higher", stronger adjunct grain effects / flavoring above what the recipe is designed for. This will effect the flavor profile of the beer.
This is a great thread, took me a few days to get through it and it pretty much convinced me to give BIAB a try as soon as I burn through my supply of extract.
Has anyone thought about using something similar to those s/s mesh hop baskets or spider thingys instead of a bag? It would cost more in the short run but it may be easier to handle and clean? Here's the thread on the hop basket, wonder if Chad454 could build a nice BIAB out of s/s?
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/f11/new-way-control-pellet-hop-gunk-352293/
One thing I learned with BIAB is to not crowd your grain when mashing. I used a 5g pain strainer bag with a keggle and found my efficiency to be awfully low. The grains need room to float and absorb water. A small bag or hop strainer is not going to get the job done.
c_osbourn said:Seen a vid on youtube about using a steamer on the bottom of the kettle so you don't scorch the bag, anyone having problems with this?
Seen a vid on youtube about using a steamer on the bottom of the kettle so you don't scorch the bag, anyone having problems with this?
There was testing done with this as I've already posted here. A brewer here took some scrap material left over from making his Voille bag and tied it directly onto his 240v 5500w heating element in his kettle. He set it on 100% power for like 20 minutes, and the bag showed no signs of scorching, burning, anything.
It's a myth.
^^^^ +1000
I don't use anything under my bag. I just stir while heating to mash out (I stopped worrying about keeping the temps exact log ago). My bag is the original one and has no signs of scorching.
that said, yes a steam basket turned upside down, or a cake rack will work if it gives you peace of mind
Seen a vid on youtube about using a steamer on the bottom of the kettle so you don't scorch the bag, anyone having problems with this?
Do I do it? Yes. Do I think there's any chance of it actually being a problem? No. My first batch I had nothing under it and it was fine; no burning.
If you are still considering doing BIAB method, can you still use kits and just add all the water at once?
Noob
I would "sparge" with the topup water instead of just putting it in. Either dunk sparge or pour through a collinder like item.You can get away with a 15 gallon pot. Just mash with less water, then after the mash top up with water to your preboil amount.
newnick said:Double crush is helpful with BIAB.
scsjohn said:Ok. So I can use the 15 gallon pot. Right now I have a 10.5 gallon. I'm gonna purchase one either way either a 15 or 20. If I went with the 20, that would create the most simple system, correct? I just mash with all 15 gallons, heat to 170, wait and pull the bag out. Then start boiling.
Other wise, with a 15 gallon pot, I have to perform other operations.
Is what I'm saying correct?
Sorry if these are basic questions. (Perhaps I should have started a thread.) I've only completed one BIAB--a double IPA, which seems to be going well. 3 more days of dry hopping and then bottle.
Thanks for those who've commented. Your help is appreciated.
If you are looking for simple, IMO the mashout to 170 is optional...some like it yet others question the need...stir well several times either way though to aid in rinsing the sugars from the grain!