Ummmm...don't heat your strike water as high on the next one...are you looking for something more than that?
With any mash in process you want to start higher then your intended mash temperature. It unfortunately varies by system but many Brewers start 10-12 degrees above and a grain of 72° will generally fall into the intended temperature range.
For my cooler mash tun 11° above mash temp is the money spot...to cool down I would have some ice or cold water on hand...you can also mix it vigorously to get the temp down.
Hope this helps!
Sort of, yeah? Like how much above my mash temperature should I shoot for? I had heard drop it in when the water was in the low 160s, but that might be for three vessel systems where you lose heat pouring the water.
With BIAB, I only assume 3-5 degrees F temperature drop, as opposed to when I use a cooler and traditional batch sparge when it loses about 12 degrees F. BIAB is a simpler process, so you don't need to heat up your strike water nearly as much as with other brewing methods.
Wouldn't you need to heat it more, since a kettle isn't insulated like a cooler?
Wouldn't you need to heat it more, since a kettle isn't insulated like a cooler?
Great question. Actually if I want to mash at 152 F (for example), I would typically aim for about 155 F then let it fall to the 140s over the course of the mash. In fact I do this all the time, been doing so for years. In my view, the average mash temperature over the full extent of the mash is all that really matters -- I really don't care at all whatsoever about maintaining absolute constant temperature the whole time, because 1) it's impossible and 2) it doesn't make any discernible difference in the quality of the final beer! Experiments could be run on this, but with a conservative P value like 0.05, I'm sure I already know what the outcome would be, same as anything else... "we were unable to reliably determine any difference..." yadda yadda.![]()
most of the conversion happens in the first 15-20 minutes of the mash
so it's much better to start at the correct temperature than it is to try to account for the higher rate of heat loss
having a larger mass of water... will cool it less when you add the grain.
I disagree with this reasoning because of my above post, but I bet we both make good beer.![]()
No, for 2 reasons
rate of heat loss is independent of initial strike temp in regards to mash temp.
Meaning that if you want to mash at 152, it's better to start at 152 and cool to 148, than it is to start at 156 and hit 152 by the end. This is because of the fact most of the conversion happens in the first 15-20 minutes of the mash, so it's much better to start at the correct temperature than it is to try to account for the higher rate of heat loss. I also have a jacket on my kettle so my heat loss is minimal (3 degrees or so over an hour).
The second reason is what I said above about having a larger mass of water. You will cool it less when you add the grain.