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Condensation: Beer Raining from the Ceiling

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Razorback_Jack

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If any of you have followed me lately, I’ve recently gotten into all-grain via the Mash and Boil, and also recently into kegging.

When I used the M&B I did it in the kitchen, because I wanted to be close to the sink for my immersion cooler. My kitchen ceiling is a little recessed. After my boil I realized the faces of that recess were raining beer! I know that beer raining from the skies is a dream we’ve all had.... but not in the kitchen!

Is there anything I can do during my boil to help keep that condensation from occurring? None that I see, other than covering with a lid which kills the properties of the wort while boiling. If I had a 50 ft extension hose from my kitchen sink to the garage, I suppose I could use the cooler that way.... but that’s $75 or so I don’t need to spend.

Ideas? Thanks community of brewers.

Jackson
 
1. Reduce the boil off rate to somewhere in the 4-10% per hour range.

2. (If you want to be inside) you need either good ventilation to remove the water vapor, like a ventilation hood commonly installed over a stove top, or you need a condenser.
 
Running a fan and keeping the air moving in your room should reduce condensation on the ceiling.

Venting the steam outside likely better, but a simple fan moving the room air should avoid the heavy steam laying up against the ceiling and condensing.
 
Using a less aggressive boil and keeping it covered most of the time ( or slightly cracked) are not bad things. It will not ruin the properties of the wort as you say.
 
Using a less aggressive boil and keeping it covered most of the time ( or slightly cracked) are not bad things. It will not ruin the properties of the wort as you say.
Thanks. I might try keeping it half-covered, and also a fan. Did another this past weekend and the fan seemed to help a lot.
 
Keeping the pot covered is not going to make the water vapor disappear and you also run the risk of a boilover. To actually fix the issue as others have already mentioned you need to either vent to the outside or use some form of steam condensation device.
 
Raising the temp of your house by a few degrees before you brew will help as well. The colder the surface the more likely condensation is to form on it.
 
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