I'm going to brew this big kit that I got on sale and I'm working up the mashing/sparging plan. I know efficiency will drop, but I'd like to mitigate that as much as possible. I usually hit about 70% brewhouse with 14 lbs of grain as an example.
I plan to work with more water than usual and do a 120 minute boil. With my equipment profile (Cooler MIAB), I'll use almost 11 gallons of water for a 5.5G batch. I've been going back and forth on the best approach. I usually target even first and second runnings volumes, but I'm thinking of mashing pretty thick with this to leave more water for the sparge, which I'll do in 2 batches. Using Brew265, the numbers look like this:
1 qt/lb mash thickness, 6.31G for the mash. Mash for 90 minutes
That leaves 4.6G of sparge water, which I'll do in two 2.3G batches.
Is this a good approach to maximize efficiency, or should I just go with my usual equal runnings approach?
I plan to work with more water than usual and do a 120 minute boil. With my equipment profile (Cooler MIAB), I'll use almost 11 gallons of water for a 5.5G batch. I've been going back and forth on the best approach. I usually target even first and second runnings volumes, but I'm thinking of mashing pretty thick with this to leave more water for the sparge, which I'll do in 2 batches. Using Brew265, the numbers look like this:
1 qt/lb mash thickness, 6.31G for the mash. Mash for 90 minutes
That leaves 4.6G of sparge water, which I'll do in two 2.3G batches.
Is this a good approach to maximize efficiency, or should I just go with my usual equal runnings approach?