first thing I'd do is make a simple young drinkable brew with darker grains, maybe a simple brown beer. Do you use a filter for your water? You should if you haven't been. Use a neutral ale yeast like nottingham 2 pks. Keep everything simple. 154* saac @60minutes some ekg or fuggles for hops. Remember when doing all grain you need to cut back on your hops because you get better utilization compared to extract brewing
That 70 qt cooler size sounds pretty large for a small batch of beer. Sound more of a 10 gallon batch size unless your doing really high gravity beers. How thin is the mashbed in that cooler? A smaller cooler for normal 5 gallon batches keeps a thicker bed and maintains temps better. Make sure the tubing from the mashtun is rated for high temperatures some of the vinyl tubing on the shelves of the big box stores are only rated @110*F. the elastomers can leach into the wort if not rated high enough.
Use 65% efficiency when formulating the recipes onyour first few brews until you get a handle on your mash efficiency. don't worry about trying to get up to mashout temps when sparging. 170-180* water in a 150* mashbed will work.
This one is very important. Make sure the thermometer you are using for mashing is pretty accurate +/-2*
That 70 qt cooler size sounds pretty large for a small batch of beer. Sound more of a 10 gallon batch size unless your doing really high gravity beers. How thin is the mashbed in that cooler? A smaller cooler for normal 5 gallon batches keeps a thicker bed and maintains temps better. Make sure the tubing from the mashtun is rated for high temperatures some of the vinyl tubing on the shelves of the big box stores are only rated @110*F. the elastomers can leach into the wort if not rated high enough.
Use 65% efficiency when formulating the recipes onyour first few brews until you get a handle on your mash efficiency. don't worry about trying to get up to mashout temps when sparging. 170-180* water in a 150* mashbed will work.
This one is very important. Make sure the thermometer you are using for mashing is pretty accurate +/-2*