I just brewed 2 batches on Saturday and got 80-85% efficiency using method #1. I also squeezed the hell out of the grain bags.
Nice work Stux.
Assuming you had a large enough pot to mash with full volume BIAB, would you do a mash-out or just mash and immediately squeeze and dump the grain?
Well, as far as I'm aware, BIABrewer has always advocated Into Boil/Into Kettle etc efficiency, as that doesn't vary greatly from brewer to brewer, where as the Into Fermenter efficiency greatly depends on individual brewers practises and equipment
The thing is with Full-volume No Sparge BIAB the Mash Efficiency and Into Boil and End of Boil Efficiencies should all be about the same. Which means if you measure your gravity pre and post boil along with your volumes you get a neat double-check on your efficiency.
el_caro said:What water volume to grain weight ratio did you use for the mash?
Can you post grain weight, mash water volume and sparge water volume. Did you teabag the sparge or just pour the sparge water over the suspended bag?
How long did you mash?
Each batch was 6lbs of grains in 2 gallons of water for a grain thickness of 1.25 qt/lb. Mashed in at 163F for a 150F rest for 60 minutes (end temp 145F). Dunk/teabag sparged in 4 gallons at 170F for 10 minutes. Put grain bag in strainer on top of kettle and pressed with all of my weight with a metal lid until I couldn't squeeze anything more out of it.
These were partial mash recipes and I exceeded my OG after adding the called-for amounts of DME. According to BeerPal calculations, my efficiencies were 83-85%.
I've been thinking of incorporating an infusion mashout step into an (almost) full-volume BIAB process. Can anyone address the infusion / slow ramp options, specifically why an infusion of boiling water would or wouldn't be a good idea?
Xaphoeous said:Will 11 pounds of grains and 6.5 gallons of water fit in an 8 gallon pot?
Xaphoeous said:How much water do you need in order to come up with about 5.5 gallons post-boil to go into the fermenter?
So, I am back to doing #1 because of efficiency and the fact that it's easy. I can heat up my "sparge" water in my separate pot in the kitchen while I am draining and first wort hopping in my main kettle. I'll heat up the water to mashout temps in the sparge kettle, and combine sparge and mashout for ~ 10 minutes in that kettle while bringing the main kettle to boil. I'll then squeeze the bag and add the second runnings into the main kettle and do the boil.
el_caro said:Thanks for sharing that info.
What water volume to grain weight ratio did you use for the mash?
Can you post grain weight, mash water volume and sparge water volume.
How long did you mash?
Will 11 pounds of grains and 6.5 gallons of water fit in an 8 gallon pot? How much water do you need in order to come up with about 5.5 gallons post-boil to go into the fermenter?
Well, I'm getting 99.5% conversion efficiency anyway, not much room to improve there.
a No Sparge Full Volume BIAB will get you about 83% into the boil efficiency if you squeeze the bag.
You could sparge and maybe reduce your grain requirements by half a pound or something...
But once you go no-sparge, you realize what a PITA a sparge step is
Its only when you try to do a Maxi brew that a sparge really comes into its own as you will be bumping your Into Boil efficiency from 60-70% to 80%
The BIABrewer.info method is :
1) Full Volume Mash for 90 minutes. Because the mash is thinner, it can take longer to convert
2) Mashout + Squeeze. Helps efficiency
3) Boil for 90 minutes. More boil-off gives you more Mash water which gets you more efficiency too.
This will get you about 83% Into Boil for normal gravity 5 gallon brews.
18) Boil length depends on weather conditions (just learned that humidity is a bitch). I now boil based on volume more then based on a specific time. Boil until Pre-Boil volume is reached add first hop addition.
With BIAB and no chill the brew day is just 3.5 hours long, 1/2 hour next day to pitch yeast.
Oh I forgot the "No chill" Steps.
14. At end of boil drain kettle in to 6 gallon Jerry can.
15. squeeze out air (use insulated gloves) seal.
16. leave in fermenting area overnight.
17. Next day pour into fermentor , pitch yeast.
With BIAB and no chill the brew day is just 3.5 hours long, 1/2 hour next day to pitch yeast.
I'm pretty disappointed in yesterdays brew day, now the brew before I got ~80% efficiency with 14.25# grain, but yesterday I got ~60-65% with 18# grain. I added 1 extra quart (1 lt) of water to offset grain absorption and that was it. I noticed a thicker mash than normal. I hit my pre-boil volume.
I do the #3 method on this thread (full volume mash). I did a 60 minute mash and a 60 minute boil.
I must of hit the in-efficiency wall. What would the max. efficiency be for an 18# grain bill? I would boil off 2 quarts (2 lt) more in a 90 minute boil, so if I added this amount more next time to get a thinner mash and mash for 90 minutes, is that about the best I can do? I only got a 1.077 OG.
You can use the calculator at this link to work it out
BIABrewer.info • View topic - A New Approach to BIAB Calculus using Conversion Efficiency
It's only metric currently, but I think if you play some what-if games it will confirm your results. You will also be able to see how much of a difference the sparging makes
The thing is with Full-volume No Sparge BIAB the Mash Efficiency and Into Boil and End of Boil Efficiencies should all be about the same. Which means if you measure your gravity pre and post boil along with your volumes you get a neat double-check on your efficiency.