Another newbie question...
The extract kit instructions I have seen are all pretty similar in procedure.
Boil 2.5 gallons of wort. Chill to below 70F in ice bath or with wort chiller. Add 2.5+ water to get to 5 gallons total. Pitch yeast. Cooling the wort is supposed to be done quickly.
Makes sense. However, I was wondering why another method would not work.
Why couldn't you add the wort to much cooler water (the same 2.5+ gallons that is going to be added anyway)? Instead of having the extra water at room temp, why not chill that water first? You could still chill the wort, but it wouldn't have to be as cool. For example, adding 2.5 gal of 40F water to a 90F wort should give you a 65F mixture for pitching.
Even adding that chilled water in increments to the hot wort could achieve a quicker cool down to the desired temp.
Is there a reason it shouldn't be done this way?
The extract kit instructions I have seen are all pretty similar in procedure.
Boil 2.5 gallons of wort. Chill to below 70F in ice bath or with wort chiller. Add 2.5+ water to get to 5 gallons total. Pitch yeast. Cooling the wort is supposed to be done quickly.
Makes sense. However, I was wondering why another method would not work.
Why couldn't you add the wort to much cooler water (the same 2.5+ gallons that is going to be added anyway)? Instead of having the extra water at room temp, why not chill that water first? You could still chill the wort, but it wouldn't have to be as cool. For example, adding 2.5 gal of 40F water to a 90F wort should give you a 65F mixture for pitching.
Even adding that chilled water in increments to the hot wort could achieve a quicker cool down to the desired temp.
Is there a reason it shouldn't be done this way?