Hello,
I have a 35l kettle and brew outside on gas. I have quite a lot of evaporation, if it is cold and dry outside it can be almost 30% boil off.
If I compensate for this boil off at the mashing stage, it either doesn’t fit in my kettle (or boils over, depending on the recipe), or I have to brew to a smaller volume in the fermenter.
Obviously if I don’t compensate I have too high initial gravity.
I was thinking of compensating the boil off by periodically adding boiling hot water throughout the boil to maintain pretty much the pre boil volume, or in other words maintaining the constant desired initial gravity by adding boiling water during the boil.
My understanding is that would have zero ill effect, am I correct ?
Or alternatively, letting the wort concentrate by evaporation, and then add boiled then cooled water at the end of the boil to dilute back to desired initial gravity. The cooled water having the added bonus of helping cool the wort faster.
There might be added infection risk, and lower hops utilization, that might be counter balanced by adding about 10% more hops.
Or just had that water boiling hot at the end, same result except slower cooling but less infection risk.
What is your opinion on this?
Thank you,
Nicolas
I have a 35l kettle and brew outside on gas. I have quite a lot of evaporation, if it is cold and dry outside it can be almost 30% boil off.
If I compensate for this boil off at the mashing stage, it either doesn’t fit in my kettle (or boils over, depending on the recipe), or I have to brew to a smaller volume in the fermenter.
Obviously if I don’t compensate I have too high initial gravity.
I was thinking of compensating the boil off by periodically adding boiling hot water throughout the boil to maintain pretty much the pre boil volume, or in other words maintaining the constant desired initial gravity by adding boiling water during the boil.
My understanding is that would have zero ill effect, am I correct ?
Or alternatively, letting the wort concentrate by evaporation, and then add boiled then cooled water at the end of the boil to dilute back to desired initial gravity. The cooled water having the added bonus of helping cool the wort faster.
There might be added infection risk, and lower hops utilization, that might be counter balanced by adding about 10% more hops.
Or just had that water boiling hot at the end, same result except slower cooling but less infection risk.
What is your opinion on this?
Thank you,
Nicolas