Word back from Tim is that they've updated the down under to come with the 25 gallon kettle vs the 20. The down under is mostly purchased by commercial breweries for their pilot brews and wanted the extra space.
He's good with swapping my kettle out, so I just need to decide if it really is too big to do 5 gallons.
its not, i have the same set up, I created a prototype years ago, it does brew 5 gallons just very low in the pot, the good news is "no boil over" will ever happen
...So that's 6.8 gallons below the grain. If I started with say 10 gallons, the starting water line would be 2.35 inches above the mesh bottom. That seems pretty shallow for the grain bed.
for my set up I used a 3 inch space between the bottom of the inside pot and the bottom of the kettle and all I did was use enough water to cover the grain by an inch while recirculating making the sparge less because of the wide pot but it does work, because of that less amount of spargable water I started recirculating my sparge water again after adding it just to wash it I guess and it worked fine, just to clarify I didn't like making 5 gallon batches in such a large pot but it worked well for 10When you do 5 gallons do you have any issues with getting the grains fully submerged?
I did some measuring and calculating last night and this morning again. The kettle is 20 inches wide and 19.5 inches high which gives it about 0.735 inches per gallon. The basket is 15.5 inches high and the mesh bottom is about an inch above that, so the grain bed starts about 5 inches above the bottom of the kettle. So that's 6.8 gallons below the grain. If I started with say 10 gallons, the starting water line would be 2.35 inches above the mesh bottom. That seems pretty shallow for the grain bed. Calculating for a kettle with 18 in diameter and 19 in height, gives .908 in per gallon, so I'd gain another .5 inches from the shorter kettle and 1.73 inches from the smaller diameter, giving about 4.5 inches for the grain bed.
This is my first step up to all grain so not 100% sure how much space the grain really needs. If I find my grains aren't covered enough could I just add more water to start and boil more off before adding my hops? I wouldn't mind keeping the kettle so I could run the occasional big batch.
Brew number 4 and the first one that came in low in OGsupposed to be 1.053 and came in at 1.043. Vanilla java porter.
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Yum! How did the rest of the brew day go?
Mashed in today. I thought Id share a tip Ive been doing and seems to work and is helpful to get the bed to temp correctly. When I mash in I stir the mash frequently until the temp stabilizes and at the same time I watch to see what setting is best to get proper recirc. This usually takes about the first 7-10 minutes of the mash. When I raise temp to sparge I raise it to 168-170 open the pump full and then I stir the bed again once or twice until the temp settles in. Then I reset the pump speed. This only takes a few minutes tops. Ive found this gives me the fastest and best bed temps.
I use the pump and recirc arm to whirlpool at the end. What gets through I dump out of the bottom of my conical. I know that's not possible for everyone but what comes out of the conical is typically not something Id worry a lot about in a regular fermenter. Seems to be mostly hop parts and protiensI pretty much do the same thing for the first portion of the mash. I found that angling the little whirlpool valve down some helps a lot too. Once it's set I never have to touch it again and the mash seems to float pretty well.
What does everyone do about the trub that gets through? I crush at .045 or whatever it was Tim suggested but still get a ton of grain trub in the bottom of the kettle, enough that it plugs my plate chiller. I use a hop spider so it's basically all grain sediment getting through the screen.
For now I sanatize the chiller, pull the lines so I can get a whirlpool going, then hook the chiller back up but I'd like something a little more foolproof.
I pretty much do the same thing for the first portion of the mash. I found that angling the little whirlpool valve down some helps a lot too. Once it's set I never have to touch it again and the mash seems to float pretty well.
What does everyone do about the trub that gets through? I crush at .045 or whatever it was Tim suggested but still get a ton of grain trub in the bottom of the kettle, enough that it plugs my plate chiller. I use a hop spider so it's basically all grain sediment getting through the screen.
For now I sanatize the chiller, pull the lines so I can get a whirlpool going, then hook the chiller back up but I'd like something a little more foolproof.
Hope this comes across clearly via text.....
DL'ed the Beersmith equipment profile from CO Brewing and making a 10 gall recipe for a simple saison for my first brew session. I have a 25# grain bill, 1.055 SG and it's saying 16 gallons of water needed.
Problem is the profile has my mash tun at 15 gallons, so BS is sayng I need an 18gal mash tun. So effectively with these numbers I need to hold back 3 gallons. Now I realize the kettle is 20 gallons and not all that volume is contained in the "mash tun" and I feel it will be "ok" but want to confirm this with some of you that have used the system
Thanks, I am going to try going with beersmith's volumes and seeing where it lands me.
Odd that CO Brewing created a equipment profile for Beersmith and their Excel water calculator is almost 3 gallons more for the same grain amount.
Thanks, re-read my post. The BS profile for the 20 gallon system has the MT volume at 15 gallons, which is reality may be 15 gallons. I just view it differently and unsure if I should change it since while the basket maay be 15, the "tun" itself is 20 gallonsThe profile says 15? Can't you just update it to 20?
My last brew was 25.5 lbs of grain and 16.5 gallons of water. It was close to the top of the basket but it worked. Next time I will probably save 1 gallon, add the grain, then consider adding the gallon right back depending how it looks. But with 25 lbs and 16g you should be close but fine.
Thanks, I will read up and tweak it a bit.Here is how I got Beersmith and the CBS calculator to match.
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/showthread.php?p=7683414#post7683414
Thanks, re-read my post. The BS profile for the 20 gallon system has the MT volume at 15 gallons, which is reality may be 15 gallons. I just view it differently and unsure if I should change it since while the basket maay be 15, the "tun" itself is 20 gallons
Thanks, I will read up and tweak it a bit.
I think the profile would be more accurate if you updated the 15 to 20. My basket is 15x16 and IIRC that calculates to only about 13g. So if you go by the measurement of the basket you will have to adjust down even more.
But the basket only holds the grains. The water fills the area in and around the basket. BeerSmith is probably assuming a normal kettle with a false bottom for the mash tun. But even though the basket limits the grains the water still flows to the full size of the kettle. So you might be slightly less than a 20g kettle with a false bottom but I doubt it will be 5g worth.
If you go into BeerSmith and look for the add-ons you will find profiles for the BrewBoss. This isn't the same as the CO Brewing but it also has a basket inside a 20g kettle that sits above a heating element and below the lid and inside the walls. All those have the mash volume setting at 20g and not 15g.
I bet if you change the mash volume setting from 15g to 20g you will find your recipe will fit. The stats I gave you from my last brew indicate you should be fine. If you want to be more conservative you could use a value of 19g or 18g just to be safe.
come on guys theres nothing exact about bib, thats the beauty of it, easy to use, you don't have to think, just brew ...and drink lol