Stop overthinking this. Chill as far as you can with your ground water then put it in your fermentation chamber to cool to your fermentation temperature then pitch the yeast.
Early on in my brewing journey I only had an immersion chiller. I held that view that the yeast needed to be pitched right away. I would get it as low as I could, pitch the yeast, then stick in the fermentaton chamber. Then I started to ease off that view by chilling to let the wort reach the high end of the lager temperature, then pitched the yeast. Along the way, I started using a plate chiller and when I started whirlpooling hops, I realized I could recirculate the wort to get it down in temperature a little lower than a single pass through would. This also works with a counterflow chiller, which I now use instead of the plate chiller. Another change I have made is that I now try to pitch at under the intended set point for the lager by a few degrees, so I let the wort get to that temperature in the ferm chamber, then pitch. I've read a number of anecdotes of brewers not having issues with allowing wort to cool overnight. I've been pretty successful all around with each of these methods, in general, it's the overall temperature control during the entire fermentation that is the most important in my view as far as temperature effects. I've always use liquid yeasts as well.Newbie with no lager experience, but is this really a big deal? Nobody just chills to tap water temp, then places in the chamber to reach pitch temperature (say, overnight)?
Newbie with no lager experience, but is this really a big deal? Nobody just chills to tap water temp, then places in the chamber to reach pitch temperature (say, overnight)?
I do it with all my beers, lagers and ales. With zero issues. Put the lid on your fermenter, you don’t have to seal it, while it cools then pitch your yeast when it reaches your fermentation temperature.Newbie with no lager experience, but is this really a big deal? Nobody just chills to tap water temp, then places in the chamber to reach pitch temperature (say, overnight)?
I use a small 30-plate DudaDiesel plate chiller. Keeping solids out of it is the best strategy, so I use kettle filters, and kettle hops are bagged. Even Irish moss should be bagged.Always reluctant to go with a plate chiller, but our shop has a used one at $79. Bit leery as they can't be broken down to be cleaned,
OK, thanks Island. I think I'm going to shy away and likely go with a CFC then, if I end up with a pump. Unless it would be prohibitively expensive, it would be nice if they made a plate heat exchanger that can be broken down, on the home level. Probably not doable on a commercial basis.I use a small 30-plate DudaDiesel plate chiller. Keeping solids out of it is the best strategy, so I use kettle filters, and kettle hops are bagged. Even Irish moss should be bagged.
You can bake them in a 450°F oven, and that helps to sanitize and dry out any hop pulp or other solids that inadvertently got in there, but you can never be sure you get it all out. Reason is, the plates form parallel channels, so the wort or water bypasses obstructions, without putting any pressure on clogs to break them up or help flush them out.
CFCs can be just as efficient, with much less maintenance.OK, thanks Island. I think I'm going to shy away and likely go with a CFC then,
I haven't come across one yet. Even the smallest commercial one is much too big for homebrewing. The passages in those are probably much bigger too, so clogging may not be as much of an issue unless whole grain or hop flowers are sent down the pipe.Unless it would be prohibitively expensive, it would be nice if they made a plate heat exchanger that can be broken down, on the home level. Probably not doable on a commercial basis.
This is what I do. I found a cheap pump on amazon and I used it for both my IC and my keg and bucket washer. Cheap, easy and a few bags of ice from the local liquor store an I am at temp fairly soon. I use the time that I am chilling down to start my cleanup and sanitize my FV.Seeing as you're strained for time, if you can get it to low 60s, pitch and then throw in ferm chamber. Since you crashed the starter, the yeast will be in lag phase anyway for the time it takes to get your wort to the 50s in the ferm chamber.
In the future, when using an IC, you can fill a cooler with ice water and a pond pump to recirculate. It'll get the wort to 50 very quickly.
There's a pump at Home Depot that seems to fit the bill at 500GPH, 1/2" tubing inlet ready to go (seems close anyway to the youtube vid @wepeeler posted - thanks again), but I'd prefer not to spend $64 on a pump if I can avoid it. Mind telling me which amazon pump you went with? Just didn't want to underpower the flow, as that's also key I would think, to the efficiency of the setup.This is what I do. I found a cheap pump on amazon and I used it for both my IC and my keg and bucket washer. Cheap, easy and a few bags of ice from the local liquor store an I am at temp fairly soon. I use the time that I am chilling down to start my cleanup and sanitize my FV.
Apparently HopStopper manufacturing was a one man operation and the one man retired.Those large mesh bottom kettle filters, such as Hop Stoppers, will probably do a good job too. But they all seem out of stock, or perhaps even discontinued.
Great, thanks much.I use a cheapo pond pump from home depot ~15 years ago. It's a "Geoglobal FP300". "300 gph". With my little 25' stainless IC, it's mostly thermal transfer bound. If you have a copper or much longer IC, more flow might help.