Morrey
Well-Known Member
Graduating from extract to BIAB.
So I'll move from my kitchen to my man cave. I have done extract for many moons, and even have a nice lagering setup. I now have a 60 qt Bayou Classic pot w/basket and a high output propane burner. I sent the pot's measurements to Michael Wilser and have a BIAB bag and pulley kit on the way.
Next, will I simply follow the grain bill and recipe for AG recipes? No additions or reductions in grain quantity since I'll do the BIAB method?
I will do 5G batches so they will fit in my corny kegs. To calculate how much water to start with, how do I make that determination? I would think it depends on the grain bill and type of grains?
Sparge or no sparge? Again, this would surely impact the amount of H2O I start with.
With these questions in mind, can anyone suggest a good, simple read that outlines BIAB basics? I'll be reading and studying as I go, but it helps to have a simple primer at first w/o bogging down too much technical. I brewed a number of beers before reading Palmer's book, and it made so much more sense then since I kind of knew the language.
Thanks for any support!!
So I'll move from my kitchen to my man cave. I have done extract for many moons, and even have a nice lagering setup. I now have a 60 qt Bayou Classic pot w/basket and a high output propane burner. I sent the pot's measurements to Michael Wilser and have a BIAB bag and pulley kit on the way.
Next, will I simply follow the grain bill and recipe for AG recipes? No additions or reductions in grain quantity since I'll do the BIAB method?
I will do 5G batches so they will fit in my corny kegs. To calculate how much water to start with, how do I make that determination? I would think it depends on the grain bill and type of grains?
Sparge or no sparge? Again, this would surely impact the amount of H2O I start with.
With these questions in mind, can anyone suggest a good, simple read that outlines BIAB basics? I'll be reading and studying as I go, but it helps to have a simple primer at first w/o bogging down too much technical. I brewed a number of beers before reading Palmer's book, and it made so much more sense then since I kind of knew the language.
Thanks for any support!!