user 246304
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I tend not to recirculate during mashing, though I can. Mostly because I built my system only recently and the weather has been really cold. I can heat during recirc, of course, but bad memories from long ago when I built a keggle system and scorched the crap out of the bottom, I guess, leaves me sticking with a static mash. A few questions.
In the cold, do those with silicone hoses and Chugger-type pumps, as I have, it seems to me you're fighting heat dissipation in your hoses as much as in the tun. As the wort passes through your hosing and pump, you lose a ton of heat. What's your experience?
Another reason I've not heat recirculated, is that it seems to me you're denaturing the amylases (not to mention proteases, etc.) as you heat locally, are you not?
Finally, I have Spike vessels. I've felt that especially with something like this, even though I maintain a liquid pool floating on the grain bed, that whatever heat I might raise in the developing wort really doesn't penetrate through the mash bed efficiently, because the top recirc port is tangential. I actually cannot see how heated wort floated on top, however it's done, seeps uniformly through a large and deep grist. Your thoughts?
I don't step mash anymore, with the exception of a mashout. Just want to maintain a given mash temp. Last outing with the new system was terrible - nighttime, cold, and I was pretty shocked at not only how fast things dropped, but how much makeup boiling water I had to use to maintain the mash temp. Again, sort of paranoid of heating, I'm almost positive unwarranted.
Leaving me to say, seems to me I'm better off trying to nail insulation (saw a study somewhere, where of 4 methods, a simple sleeping bag worked best???) than heating to maintain temp. But I'm open to your thoughts. Thanks.
In the cold, do those with silicone hoses and Chugger-type pumps, as I have, it seems to me you're fighting heat dissipation in your hoses as much as in the tun. As the wort passes through your hosing and pump, you lose a ton of heat. What's your experience?
Another reason I've not heat recirculated, is that it seems to me you're denaturing the amylases (not to mention proteases, etc.) as you heat locally, are you not?
Finally, I have Spike vessels. I've felt that especially with something like this, even though I maintain a liquid pool floating on the grain bed, that whatever heat I might raise in the developing wort really doesn't penetrate through the mash bed efficiently, because the top recirc port is tangential. I actually cannot see how heated wort floated on top, however it's done, seeps uniformly through a large and deep grist. Your thoughts?
I don't step mash anymore, with the exception of a mashout. Just want to maintain a given mash temp. Last outing with the new system was terrible - nighttime, cold, and I was pretty shocked at not only how fast things dropped, but how much makeup boiling water I had to use to maintain the mash temp. Again, sort of paranoid of heating, I'm almost positive unwarranted.
Leaving me to say, seems to me I'm better off trying to nail insulation (saw a study somewhere, where of 4 methods, a simple sleeping bag worked best???) than heating to maintain temp. But I'm open to your thoughts. Thanks.