Chemstudent
Member
Just had a taste of my first beer, made with the brooklyn brew IPA kit. It looked and tasted great and I'm glad everything turned out well. Now I'd like to move on to the next batch.
This first batch I made by mashing in the grains that the kit came with and then boiling the wort, adding hops, throwing in yeast, etc. The hard part came when I had to pour the grain liquid from one pot into another through a strainer and then pour more hot liquid over the spent grains. The process was time consuming, since my strainer was too small and the pots were large to handle. My question is, what would be the simplest and cheapest way to make the mashing process easier? I've read some about mash tuns or grain bags, but I don't want to spend too much extra money.
And while I'm on the subject, the batch I made was only one gallon and had me using a large part of my relatively large pots already. How will I be able to handle five gallons like I see many are doing?
Thanks in advance.
This first batch I made by mashing in the grains that the kit came with and then boiling the wort, adding hops, throwing in yeast, etc. The hard part came when I had to pour the grain liquid from one pot into another through a strainer and then pour more hot liquid over the spent grains. The process was time consuming, since my strainer was too small and the pots were large to handle. My question is, what would be the simplest and cheapest way to make the mashing process easier? I've read some about mash tuns or grain bags, but I don't want to spend too much extra money.
And while I'm on the subject, the batch I made was only one gallon and had me using a large part of my relatively large pots already. How will I be able to handle five gallons like I see many are doing?
Thanks in advance.