Anyone else do this with rolled oats?. After mashing, and the water is heating up to boil, i add all the oats in a big hop spider. Temps around 170-190 for a few mins lettingit sit inside the kettle. . Then drain all the starchy water into the kettle. I might do this process 2 or 3 times depending on the recipe. Doing 12 gal batches mostly. Seems to be working great and eliminating the gooyee slow draining mash. Hope that make sense.
Also this makes some delicious oatmeal. Best I've had lol.
What a great, novel idea! It would seem like the same process could be used for any thick, sticky high protein adjunct grain like rye. Maybe put the oats in the hop spider and inbed the spider into the grain bed and mash normally, pulling it before sparging. Or maybe, after mashing out, keep the wort at mash out temperature ~70°C/165°F for :20 mins or so. Put the spider with oats/rye, etc., into the wort for extraction before the amylase enzymes denature.
Your idea might also provide a method for detoction mashes as well. Put part of the grist into a hop spider, then dough in. When it comes time to detoct, pull out the grain in the hop spider and boil it. Less muss, no fuss. I gotta' try this.
Ever since I started letting the kettle hops 'go commando', I've been trying to think of a way to re-purpose my hop spider. This might be a really good way.