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First Partial Mash...Need some advice please.

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joecav

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I am planning my first partial mash and until now have done only extract brews. I am going to mash 5 lbs American 2 row and 1/2 lb crystal 60* Lovibond with a nylon grain bag in a 5 gallon pot. My first question is are 2-3 gallons enough or too much water? Secondly I have had difficulty finding how long to conduct the mash for. Is an hour enough time or can I get away with less (30 or 45 min)? Thanks in advance, any and all advice is appreciated.
 
2.5 gallons is plenty. Depending on the size/shape of your mashing vessel, 2 would be better...as long as it completely covers the grains.

An hour should do the trick. After an hour take a spoon full of your wort and add a few drops of iodine solution. If it turns blue, let yor mash run another 10-15 mins. If the iodine stays red, you are good to go.

See, idodine turns blue when it is mixed with starch. The main purpose of mashing is to convert starches to sugars your yeast can eat. If the starch is converted you are ready to rock!
 
I am planning my first partial mash and until now have done only extract brews. I am going to mash 5 lbs American 2 row and 1/2 lb crystal 60* Lovibond with a nylon grain bag in a 5 gallon pot. My first question is are 2-3 gallons enough or too much water? Secondly I have had difficulty finding how long to conduct the mash for. Is an hour enough time or can I get away with less (30 or 45 min)? Thanks in advance, any and all advice is appreciated.

You may need more than one bag, to make sure the grain is "loose" in there. Using two bags may be needed. You want the water to be free-flowing through the grain, as if it wasn't in a bag at all, and each grain to be thoroughly wetted.

You should use 1.25-1.5 quarts of water per pound of grain for the mash. So for 5.5 pounds of grain, you'd use 6.8 to 8.25 quarts of water. I'd use 8 quarts (2 gallons) just to make the math easier. Bring the 2 gallons to 165, turn off the heat and add the grains and stir well. Check the temperature in several places and if it's different in one place, stir some more. You could be right around 152-154. If so, stir again, and then cover the pot. 45 minutes should do it, but it won't hurt to go an hour. Check the temp in 20 minutes, and turn the heat on again if it's below 150. But don't go over 158!

After the mash, lift out the grain bag(s) and hold in a colander over the pot. Pour over 170 degree water over the grain from another pot until you're at your boil volume, or alternately just take the grain bag(s) and dunk in the water. You can use up to .5 gallons per pound of grain for this, so you should reach your boil volume this way. Throw away the grain at this point, and combine those runnings if you did them in a seperate pot. You can add water to reach your boil volume if you don't have enough liquid out of the mash/sparge at this point if you need to.

That's it! Let us know if you need help.
 
Appreciate the advice everyone. It turns out that Ive outdone myself a little with this recipe. 5lbs American 2 row, 5 lbs light DME and 1/2lb crystal 60*L yielded 70 gravity points. when planning the brew i used the BYO Brewing Calculator and never checked myself on paper just assuming that everything would be fine. Looking back the efficiency for the DME was 65% and should have been changed to one. I should have used 3.5lbs DME instead of 5lbs. Well i pitched the yeast anyway (WLP001) from the vial without a starter. Mr Malty pitch calculator says i need 2.5 vials though! Do I need to pitch more yeast? and is it safe to do after initial fermentation begins or should I wait for it to quiet down to repitch?? Any other advice for fermenting a big beer would be greatly appreciated.
 
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