Robert65
Major Obvious (recently promoted)
I've been trying to find the optimal way to chill using my counterflow chiller. My typical operation is to add Whirlfloc at 15 minutes, then a couple minutes before flameout I'll start recirculating the boiling wort through my CF chiller and back out so as to create a whirlpool in the kettle. (Boiling wort to sanitize everything in the loop).
Then, I've tried two variations: one is to recirculate after starting the water until the entire kettle has cooled to about 70 degrees (takes about 15-20 minutes), then proceed to rack to fermenter. The other is to recirculate until the wort exiting the chiller has reached 70 (thermometer at exit point), at which point I direct that into the fermenter and not back into the kettle--I move the hose, in other words.
Do you think one or the other is preferable?
I couldn't say, as I use an immersion chiller, gently stirring and recirculating ice water below 100°F. I'd think you could just try comparing the clarity of wort to the fermenter using each method. It seems that the first involves more opportunity to isolate break in the kettle. OTOH maybe more recirculation of the full wort volume just offers more opportunity to mechanically break up the flocs again. To me, that potential is but one reason I don't care to use a CFC.
FWIW I chill to 50°F in the kettle (lager brewer here) and then let it settle for about 30 minutes before racking to the fermenter, but I don't have a whirlpool to segregate the break during chilling. I just rack from above after settling -- if using pellets. If using whole cone hops, I skip the lengthy settling and rack from under the hop bed after a few minutes settling. They make a wonderful filter medium for this purpose.