Oh Clark have a little faith....sorry just kidding around, Do you keg or bottle? This works IMO because you are using the kettle fermenter similar to a primary fermenter that was popular years ago. Rather than pouring everything into the fermenter, I thought one day what the hell I'll just pitch the yeast in the kettle. Many years ago, they sold my buddies and I a white tall plastic container, a primary fermenter, with the instruction to just use saran wrap over the top secured with a rubber band or a string. During active fermentation, CO2 is off gassing so rapidly that nothing will enter the fermenter if it is reasonably sealed.
You could try and mix the hop / trub ring that forms on the kettle during the boil back into the boil with your brew spoon, but I wouldn't fret over it....it is sanitary and will be in a CO2 environment...
I move my hop additions as advised for no chill brewing. FWH and / or bittering hops as usual, then any 20 minute addition is typically added at flameout. I like to hop stand, adding additional large quantities of hops as the wort slowly cools in the kettle b/w 180 and 160. After a while, and after the last hop stand addition when the wort is around 160 degrees (note pasteurization temps), I lid the kettle and forget about it for roughly 10-12 hours. Next, I put the kettle either into a swamp cooler or my fermentation freezer to bring it down the last 10 degrees or so into the mid-low sixties, aerate and pitch yeast in the kettle and put the lid back on. AND LEAVE IT ON!!!
After a couple few days after the bulk of fermentation, I usually take a plastic bag and put it over the kettle, and then wrap a string several times around the kettle and tie it snug. The bag will expand and exhibit positive pressure. After 7-12 days depending, I will rack to a keg and let the beer condition for another week or so at cellar temps....pipeline dependant....if I have NO beer, that puppy is likely heading straight to the keezer...haha
Best to pitch plenty of yeast, as always so you get a nice vigorous ferment and to give the favored yeast a leg up on any strays.
I wouldn't do this with beer I planned on aging for long periods, or even storing warm in bottles for long periods. The beer is typically in a keg in 2-3 weeks and kept nice and cold in the keezer to cold condition.
Now to really streamline the process, you can BIAB in the kettle, ferment in the kettle, then keg. A two vessel process....cheers!
Hope this helps. Hope you try it, would love to hear others experience with this fast and easy method...
wilser