nik_taylor
Member
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2014
- Messages
- 22
- Reaction score
- 8
I thought i'd share my experience with my first all grain brew, with my first wort chiller. As i was stepping up to all grain with a much larger boil volume than a partial, i wanted to cool much quicker than the standard ice water bath. I live in SoCal and as there is a water shortage i wanted to try and conserve as much as possible.
I bought the 50ft wort chiller kit from coppertubingsales.com and i already had a this submersible pump lying around: http://www.northerntool.com/shop/tools/product_792_792. I put the boil kettle with the wort chiller in the sink along with the submersible pump. Hoping to get cooling from as many surface areas as possible.
The first 5 mins or so, i used tap water (no ice) and let the water drain away as it was way too hot. As i got closer to tap temp, i dumped ice and re-usable ice blocks into the sink and started to re-circulate the water into the ice cooled water in the sink. I tested the temp out of the hose and as (physics says so) the temp of the wort gets closer to the temp of the bath the cooling slows down. The water out of the end of the chiller is still cooler than tap water so it's ok to recirculate as long as you have sufficient ice cooling.
All in all, i am now a huge fan of wort chillers and i managed to go from boiling to just below 70 in about 12-13 mins. It's nice to see the thermometer rocket down in the first 5 mins!
As a further note, i also made my first yeast starter and it took off like a rocket and was bubbling within 3 hrs.
I bought the 50ft wort chiller kit from coppertubingsales.com and i already had a this submersible pump lying around: http://www.northerntool.com/shop/tools/product_792_792. I put the boil kettle with the wort chiller in the sink along with the submersible pump. Hoping to get cooling from as many surface areas as possible.
The first 5 mins or so, i used tap water (no ice) and let the water drain away as it was way too hot. As i got closer to tap temp, i dumped ice and re-usable ice blocks into the sink and started to re-circulate the water into the ice cooled water in the sink. I tested the temp out of the hose and as (physics says so) the temp of the wort gets closer to the temp of the bath the cooling slows down. The water out of the end of the chiller is still cooler than tap water so it's ok to recirculate as long as you have sufficient ice cooling.
All in all, i am now a huge fan of wort chillers and i managed to go from boiling to just below 70 in about 12-13 mins. It's nice to see the thermometer rocket down in the first 5 mins!
As a further note, i also made my first yeast starter and it took off like a rocket and was bubbling within 3 hrs.
