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HERMS Help - Recirculation stopped by compacted bed

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mcgster

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Jun 27, 2013
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I'm hoping someone can give me some advice, i'm really trying to nail the repeatability of my brew days and i seem to be having an issue with the grain bed compacting over the false bottom every 5 to 10 minutes and killing the recirculation through my coil. Each time it happens i have to take my paddle and scrape the false bottom where the grain is compacted.

Any ideas?

Thanks!
 
Are you trying to run your pump full-bore or have you tried closing its outlet valve down (by half, for instance)? Also, do you allow the grain bed to hydrate and settle for at least a good ten minutes after dough-in before you start circulation?

Cheers!
 
Are you trying to run your pump full-bore or have you tried closing its outlet valve down (by half, for instance)? Also, do you allow the grain bed to hydrate and settle for at least a good ten minutes after dough-in before you start circulation?

Cheers!

Full bore - i was thinking the more movement the better but i'll try cutting it in half.

I had waited about 5 minutes before i started the pump, next time i'll try ten!

Thanks
 
Wait ten minutes, then recirculate as slowly as your pump will allow. Compacted grain bed in the middle of mashing sucks.
 
Yep, JUST had this happen to me on my first batch. Didn't have any luck unsticking it either, though now I think I'd probably do things a bit different.

What everyone is suggesting works. Slow down the pump to a near trickle at the start of your herms recirculation. You'll probably notice that the temp in the mash drops a hair because you're not recirculating quickly enough. After about 10 minutes, open it up a bit more, and keep watching the temps. If they continue to fall, open a hair more and so on.

I was able to maintain temp at less than 30% open valve, and didn't experience any issue with stuck mash on that second batch using this method.

Next time, I'm going to be a bit more aggressive (open it a bit further) to see if I can't improve that mash temp consistency over the first 20 minutes.
 

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