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Dee74

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I have been thinking of trying BIAB and think I have an understanding of how it should work. I am looking for a good video or site that would provide step by step directions on how to BIAB. I have searched YouTube but everyone seems to do this differently and I do not know enough to determine what is good and what is not. Any help would be appreciated.
 
How large is your kettle, and how large a batch are you looking to brew?

This will tell us if you have enough room for full volume mashing, or if you may need to sparge.
 
How large is your kettle, and how large a batch are you looking to brew?

This will tell us if you have enough room for full volume mashing, or if you may need to sparge.

I plan on purchasing a 10 gallon kettle to make 5 gallon batches.
 
That should be big enough for 10 lbs of grain, anymore and you’ll need a larger kettle
 
That should be big enough for 10 lbs of grain, anymore and you’ll need a larger kettle

I have a 10-gallon Spike kettle I bought specifically so I could do BIAB (sold my 8-gallon Megapot).

I do grain bills of 13+ pounds and have no problems. I could add another pound or two if I wanted.

A 10-gallon kettle will be fine.
 
Dee, let me note what I do w/ BIAB:

I have a 10-gallon kettle. I usually fill it with 7.25 gallons of water, adjusted as necessary w/ salts, gypsum, lactic acid, whatever.

I bring that up to strike temperature--which in my case, with my system, is about 159 degrees. Once reaching that temp, I turn off the burner and line the kettle with my BIAB (I use Michael Wilser's bag, it's great!)

I then stir in my crushed grain which is crushed finer than if I were using a mash tun and sparging, I make sure it's mixed in well (no splashing!), cover the kettle and then cover the entire thing with a sort of quilt-type thing to keep the heat in.

I stir at 15- and 30-minutes to ensure a good conversion. This helps--do it.

Then the only remaining thing is hoisting the bag to drain out the wort. Having something above to which you can hook a pulley is important for this.

I also squeeze the bag as it's suspended over the kettle to get out as much as I reasonably can. I use a pair of rubberized gloves to do this (well-washed before first use!) because, well, that stuff is still about 150 degrees.

I tend to end up with about 6.7 gallons of wort after starting with 7.25 gallons. That boils down just fine to about 5.5 or 5.6 gallons or so, a perfect volume for a 5-gallon batch.

Good luck, and enjoy the process! There's magic in the mash!
 
That should be big enough for 10 lbs of grain, anymore and you’ll need a larger kettle

I have a 10-gallon Spike kettle I bought specifically so I could do BIAB (sold my 8-gallon Megapot).

I do grain bills of 13+ pounds and have no problems. I could add another pound or two if I wanted.

A 10-gallon kettle will be fine.

Just want to parrot @mongoose33 that a 10 gallon kettle should be able to hold more than 10 pounds. I did a 2.5 gallon batch using 10 pounds of grain in a 5 gallon pot (that's really more like 4.75).
 

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