Hi everyone
I am looking for advice on doughing in on my brewzilla 3.1.1. My normal process is to heat the water to strike temperature with the malt pipe in place then turn off the 1900w element,lower the temperature to 66c and add the grain.so my questions are.
Should I leave the malt pipe out until strike temperature is reached?
Should I begin recirculation as soon as I
start adding the grain. After my research on various threads and you tube I cannot seem to find a definitive answer.
Any advice would be appreciated.
The strike temperature, given by brewfather. Is calculated, so that adding the grain mass at (given) room temperature, should cool the mix to (an average of) the first mash temperature. The grains added earlier (at the bottom) will probably be hotter, ant the later grains (at the top) will be cooler.
As others have noted, also adding a cold malt pipe, at dough in, would result in too low a temperature (initially).
Recirculate while heating to strike temp, and continue for at least 5min after hitting strike temp, to ensure the temperature is uniform.
Yes, after dough in switching off the 1900W element, leaving just the 500W, will help prevent high temperature overshoots.
I now, premix the dry gains (and oat husks), and do a gradual dough in, with minimal stirring (just enough to break up any dough balls). Then leave a 15-20 min grain bed rest, while the grain & flour hydrates (and expands), before starting circulation through the grain.
Then gradually increasing circulation, to rate just below that, where level in malt pipe rises more than 1.5cm.
Any greater level rise, and the extra fluid weight supported, can lead to a compacted grain bed.
In the BZ 3.1.1, and BZ G4, any step mash temperature increases, can take ages. Especially where much wheat, or other floury or sticky grains, are included. As the best recirculation rate, can then be quite limited.
So DON'T dough in at 32°C. (One wheat beer in BZ G4, after initial 45° protein rest, took an hour to reach 65° ! )
62°C sounds a more plausible figure for preserving beta-amylase enzymes. I aim for a 64°C mix.