Golddiggie
Well-Known Member
I was just reading the May-June issue of BYO and I might make the barley wine using a hybrid system of BIAB in the cooler mash tun... Of course, I'm going to check the actual screen size in the tun, and determine if I need to use the bag as well. I'm using a bazooka screen in the tun, so I'm not sure how small a crush I could go with and not have issues. I'm also thinking of going with a 120 minute boil, so that I can use more sparge water... Using fermcap I should be able to get ~7.5 gallons of wort into my 8 gallon kettle. Or, I'll just use my 15 gallon kettle for that batch, and sparge a bit more.
The reason I'm thinking of using the bag in the mash tun is so that I can use a smaller crush size. I'll get as much water into it as I can (1.375qt/# or a bit more) and then sparge with as close to 3 gallons as I can.
Of course, I could just put that brew to the side for another time and go with a more modest ale with about 12-15# of grain in it... Then I could test the theory of a slightly smaller crush as well as more water in the mash. I will have to see if I can get away with a .035" crush with my current mash tun setup, and not get a stuck sparge... I also think I'll stir the mash more often than I have been. I used to stir about every 15-20 minutes. Since going with the cooler, I've only stirred at the start, to get the dough-balls out, and then towards the end. So perhaps more stirring is the real answer here.
I do think that it was a good idea to go with the smaller cooler now... The 70qt, while great for capacity, simply had too much dead-space in it. It was becoming more difficult to keep the temp where I wanted it during the entire mash time. Yesterday's batch was a lot easier to maintain, since there was less dead-space in the cooler.
Ok, so after all that, what would you change next?
Stir every 15-20 minutes during the mash (I typically do 90 minute mashes)?
Crush the grains smaller (what should I step to for the next batch? .037, .035, .033?)??
Mash with as much water as possible (keeping under 2qt/#) and sparge with as much as possible too? I would have to keep the volume to a level where I won't have boil-overs in my kettle, and try to keep the boil times to under 120 minutes (~90 would be ok)...
Thinking that I should be able to get to 1.5-2qt/# in the mash, and still sparge with a good amount of water. Thinking back, I was doing more 90+ minute boils when doing BIAB to get the volume to where I needed it. So maybe I should go back to that too. Water is cheap, as is time... I just need to be sure to have the correct amount of brewing water measured out before starting.
The reason I'm thinking of using the bag in the mash tun is so that I can use a smaller crush size. I'll get as much water into it as I can (1.375qt/# or a bit more) and then sparge with as close to 3 gallons as I can.
Of course, I could just put that brew to the side for another time and go with a more modest ale with about 12-15# of grain in it... Then I could test the theory of a slightly smaller crush as well as more water in the mash. I will have to see if I can get away with a .035" crush with my current mash tun setup, and not get a stuck sparge... I also think I'll stir the mash more often than I have been. I used to stir about every 15-20 minutes. Since going with the cooler, I've only stirred at the start, to get the dough-balls out, and then towards the end. So perhaps more stirring is the real answer here.
I do think that it was a good idea to go with the smaller cooler now... The 70qt, while great for capacity, simply had too much dead-space in it. It was becoming more difficult to keep the temp where I wanted it during the entire mash time. Yesterday's batch was a lot easier to maintain, since there was less dead-space in the cooler.
Ok, so after all that, what would you change next?
Stir every 15-20 minutes during the mash (I typically do 90 minute mashes)?
Crush the grains smaller (what should I step to for the next batch? .037, .035, .033?)??
Mash with as much water as possible (keeping under 2qt/#) and sparge with as much as possible too? I would have to keep the volume to a level where I won't have boil-overs in my kettle, and try to keep the boil times to under 120 minutes (~90 would be ok)...
Thinking that I should be able to get to 1.5-2qt/# in the mash, and still sparge with a good amount of water. Thinking back, I was doing more 90+ minute boils when doing BIAB to get the volume to where I needed it. So maybe I should go back to that too. Water is cheap, as is time... I just need to be sure to have the correct amount of brewing water measured out before starting.