I have a 10 gallon mash tun and my recipe calls for like 27 lbs of grain. What to do? Two mashes?
You change up the efficiency of your system and reduce the amount of grains. Just because someone made this recipe and only got 55% efficiency doesn't mean that that is all you can get. What efficiency do you normally get?
The way grains are milled determines to a great extent the efficiency you can get. Poorly milled grains won't completely gelatinize so conversion doesn't complete and you leave a lot of starch in the grain that could have become sugars. Mill finer and your particles are smaller so they gelatinize quickly and convert very well. There is a down side to milling too fine with a conventional tun. It leads to problems draining the tun. Adding rice hulls to the mash will help with that. Mashing in a polyester bag also works as it has such a great filter area that it won't clog up. You can put a bag in your mash tun and at the end of the mash you can just lift it up to get it to drain.
If the recipe water volume is 10 gallons then you need to get a bigger tun.
That is a lot of grain for 10 gal of wort.
I usually get like 75% efficiency. And I do mash in a bag so I use a large grain bag in a non-modified igloo cooler.
Thanks for all the responses. I agree that your suggestions make the most sense. What I will do is just fill the cooler with the strike water until it reaches the top, regardless of what that water/grain ratio is. Then after the sparge I will measure the gravity and then adjust from there.
If the recipe water volume is 10 gallons then you need to get a bigger tun.
That is a lot of grain for 10 gal of wort.
You have a couple of options:
-Reduce your grain/water ratio to 1 qt/lb, and you'll be able to mash in the 10 gallon cooler.
-Do you really want 5 gallons of barleywine? Reduce the recipe for a 3 gallon batch.