All brewers strive to shave time off of their brew day. I am wondering if any brewers use hot water from their house tank to mash and sparge the grains. This would save loads of time as the water is already very close to mashing temp.
All brewers strive to shave time off of their brew day. I am wondering if any brewers use hot water from their house tank to mash and sparge the grains. This would save loads of time as the water is already very close to mashing temp.
Hot water heaters should be flushed periodically (using that drain valve on the bottom). Do that one time and see the crud that comes out and ask yourself if you want to use that water for brewing. I won't use hot water tank water for any kind of cooking.
Hot water heaters should be flushed periodically (using that drain valve on the bottom). Do that one time and see the crud that comes out and ask yourself if you want to use that water for brewing. I won't use hot water tank water for any kind of cooking.
Then it stands to reason that your cold water still contains that "gunk", and it has fallen out of suspension from your hot water.
BTW, I use hot water from the tap, but I have a Bosch tankless water heater, so not really relevant.
The thing is, most all tanks draw their supply from the botom of the tank which oif the vortex is strong enough could pull those deposits up into the water stream. Like I said, the minerals were already in the water but by this you are pulling a more solidified deposit.
Hot water is drawn from the top of the tank. How else would you bleed the air out of it?
Like I said I was having amoment and should have caught myself.