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If you can cold crash your fermenter any trub will fall out into a nice pancake you can leave behind when you transfer.
Emptying the kettle via the tap will also require a bit of getting used to.The new kettle I acquired had a very slow tap, with hindsight I should have waited and left the dregs in the bottom.
Hi Clint, please could you clarify the "For example for 23l... Iose 2.5 litres per kg of grain in your mash...you lose a litre per kg through absorption. "I use a bazooka filter in the kettle. I leave my mash paddle in the kettle after whizzing it round during the chill,it's now sterilised having been boiled,then after leaving the trub to settle I gently scrape the top of the filter to shift a bit. On emptying the kettle a bit of trub goes down the pipe to start but as the transfer continues the rest of the trub just settles into a mass.
Your volumes are easily calculated, just keep notes on how much water you use at each bit and add or subtract as required.
For example for 23l... Iose 2.5 litres per kg of grain in your mash...you lose a litre per kg through absorption. My sparge is around 23l. Kettle loss a couple of litres depending on hop additions, the rest is boil off. I'm usually 22/23 litres to fv but I'm not bothered if it's slightly out...its all beer!
HeathenOnly Carlsberg know how to make Lager
Improbably, or should that be unprobably or even impossiblyHeathen
That's a rough breakdown of my system...Igloo mash tun, 32l kettle on my gas range. All systems are different. I wouldn't know where to start with an all in one system.Hi Clint, please could you clarify the "For example for 23l... Iose 2.5 litres per kg of grain in your mash...you lose a litre per kg through absorption. "
With a grain bill of 5.5Kg is it 2.5/Kg or 1L/Kg" Sorry to appear thick.
And is 10% a good figure to use for boil off loses when using a 2.2Kw element for a 60 mins?
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