So I normally do 2.5-3 gallon partial boils and then top off to 5 gallons in the primary but I have heard from several people that doing a full 5 gallon boil makes a HUGE difference. I am using an aluminum 7.5 gallon pot so there is plenty of room to do a full boil. Unfortunately I am still using the gas range on my oven but it seems to get up to a full boil with the lid mostly covering the top.
My one concern is that I add tap water on the coldest setting (thinking this is the cleanest form of water) and about 10-15 minutes after turning on the gas burner a lot of condensation forms on the side of the pot and trickles down into the burner and then scorches my oven top. I'm in Chicago only about 3 miles from Lake Michigan so our tap water is really cold year round. Is it okay to turn the tap water to a warmer temp when filling my brew pot to 5 gallons to try avoiding the condensation on the side of the pot? Or even adding the hottest possible tap water to the brew pot initially? I had always thought this would make the water not as clean, but since I was going to be bringing to a boil eventually, does it matter?
Thanks for any input, just thought I'd see if anyone had some words of advice before I ruin a 5 gallon batch!
My one concern is that I add tap water on the coldest setting (thinking this is the cleanest form of water) and about 10-15 minutes after turning on the gas burner a lot of condensation forms on the side of the pot and trickles down into the burner and then scorches my oven top. I'm in Chicago only about 3 miles from Lake Michigan so our tap water is really cold year round. Is it okay to turn the tap water to a warmer temp when filling my brew pot to 5 gallons to try avoiding the condensation on the side of the pot? Or even adding the hottest possible tap water to the brew pot initially? I had always thought this would make the water not as clean, but since I was going to be bringing to a boil eventually, does it matter?
Thanks for any input, just thought I'd see if anyone had some words of advice before I ruin a 5 gallon batch!