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Do you strain wort when pouring into primary?

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taa800

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Does anyone strain their wort when pouring into the primary fermenter? I'm wondering if it's worth it so I don't get so much junk at the bottom of my primary. If you do, how do you do it?

I just bottled a batch of beer and I went from my primary to a bottling bucket. This was the first time I didn't use a secondary. I ended up sucking up some of the junk and it ended up plugging up my bottling wand when I was filling bottles. It was a big pain.

If I did do this, do you think this would affect the IBU if I'm straining out some of the hops? I use pelleted hops.

Thanks
Todd
 
I don't know if it would make that much off a difference trub wise but Midwest sells a huge funnel with a strainer in it I have one and didn't see much of a difference with the strainer and with out and removing the hop particals will not affect ibus
 
I do. I doubt that it really does that much but I usually get a few things stuck in my strainer plus it will help to oxygenate your wort. I whirlpool and that gets most of my trub into the middle of my kettle then I siphon off the edge. There are the the inevitable chucks of trub that will get sucked up and I like to think that my strainer catches these.

It can't hurt if you already have a good wire strainer sitting around.
 
I did with my first two and I think it was worth it. I forgot on the last batch tho so we will see this weekend when I go to bottle.
 
I do BIAB, and I clean and sanitize my bag and filter the last gallon or so through the bag to get rid of the trub on its' way to the fermenter.
 
I usually do, sometimes you get a lot and other times nothing. I keep doing it because I know it's helping to aerate the wort.
 
There really isn't a lot of benefit to separating the wort from the trub IMO. I just dump it all in the fermentor. I've done it both ways and see no difference.
 
Crap doesn't get stuck in the auto-syphon? (if you use one). This is my main reason for straining and my strained beers both came out great so nervous about switching it up. I did anyway on accident so will find out for myself.
 
i pour mine through a bucket paint strainer. Works pretty well
This.

I sometimes depending on batch size will also "pre strain" the wort with a mesh strainer, then what gets through that I will pull the paint strainer bag out. I have a stainless steel milking can that I use to transfer 5 gallons from the brew cart to the fermenter when I do 12 gallon batches.
 
I strain through a nylon thingie that goes over my bottling bucket, then from there into the better bottle. Gets most of the hop junk out, and I think aerates as well as possible short of actually getting an oxygenation system...
 
For 5 gallon batches? Everytime. I am a believer that it helps in aeration as well... I can just pick up the bk and pour it through a strainer straddling a bucket.

10 gallon batches? Haven't figured out how to pick them up yet... :)
 
Crap doesn't get stuck in the auto-syphon? (if you use one). This is my main reason for straining and my strained beers both came out great so nervous about switching it up. I did anyway on accident so will find out for myself.

I don't strain anything, I just use my auto siphon and pull out 99% of the wort from my kettle, including the really thick trubby crap at the very bottom. Granted, my hops are contained so there's not a whole ton of hop material in there... but occasionally I just toss the pellets in. Haven't had an issue with clogging yet.
 
Crap doesn't get stuck in the auto-syphon? (if you use one). This is my main reason for straining and my strained beers both came out great so nervous about switching it up. I did anyway on accident so will find out for myself.

I have never bottled so I don't know that process, guess I was a bad person to answer.

I siphon from my primary to a glass carboy for cold crashing (plastic carboys collapse at the low temp), but when I siphon I start at the top and work my way down. When I get near the trub I slowly tilt the carboy forward. I might lose a pint by not going fishing but I'm alright with that.

I aerate just fine, my last brew had bubbles in the airlock and a head of foam after 4 hours of flame out (1056). That actually was the fastest I've ever seen personally with no starter.
 
I use a big wire mess pasta strainer to dump the wort through into the primary. Catches all the hops, and aerates the wort a little. If you use one, make sure it's clean, and soak in sanitizer before use.
 
I stopped straining into primary because of the extra steps in having to sanitize the somewhat large strainer and then having to clean it. Now I just dump. You can avoid sucking stuff into your bottling bucket by using an autosyphon and the clip that holds the syphon rigidly to the bucket. I scratched a mark on the syphon all around that I line up with the top of the clip. I placed the mark so that there is about 1 1/4" from the bottom of the bucket to the intake of the syphon. Once I've sucked this much out, I sometimes strain the last bit as a seperate batch directly into pre-primed bottles and mark those so I know they have extra gunk in them.
 
I just started using a MoreBeer hopback on my last couple batches, couple ounces of leaf hops on a ten gallon batch are a great filter. Trub was sitting right on top of the hops when I dumped them out into my composter.
 
I've dumped the boil hops and break into the fermenter for hundreds of batches. Lately I've been doing a whirlpool and leaving most of it in the kettle. It may have reduced astringency from the hops. I like the cleaner yeast cake.
 
I use a funnel with a strainer in it, but the thing I found to work best was to use a nylon bag when adding my hops. When the hops are added without a bag you have a whole lot of sediment and it tends to block the the strainer and your wort doesn't pass through without having to constantly clear it.
 
Like others, I also use a paint strainer. Into the primary and also into the keg. Probably overkill but I do it anyway.
 
I keep forgetting to, and it bites my ass in the end when I can't get a clean sample for OG. Haven't gotten a proper reading in the last 4 or 5 batches (and this is after I let it settle out after cooling). :mad:
 
I like to let everything settle into the bottom of the primary and when I either, transfer to secondary or transfer to the keg, I wrap a paint strainer bag around the end of the vinyl tube and attach it with a a rubber band. It works great to keep the bigger hop particles out of the keg and helps keep the keg's dip tube clear.

Heres a picture of my "tube mittens" and this doesnt seem to aerate the beer at all.

DSCN0118.jpg
 
I like to let everything settle into the bottom of the primary and when I either, transfer to secondary or transfer to the keg, I wrap a paint strainer bag around the end of the vinyl tube and attach it with a a rubber band. It works great to keep the bigger hop particles out of the keg and helps keep the keg's dip tube clear.

Heres a picture of my "tube mittens" and this doesnt seem to aerate the beer at all.

View attachment 29211

That's brilliant! I just bought a paint strainer for a BIAB experiment but will try this on my next dry hopped beer. As long as the strainer stays below the liquid level of your beer it wont do anything - been looking for this solution but have been thinking on the syphoning end, not the bottling bucket / keg.
 
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