I've done four BIAB brews now and I'm looking for any hints or tips to improve.
I use Beersmith to create my recipes. I use the water calculations on there. I start with half a campden tablet. Then I do alkalinity and calcium tests. I use as much gypsum, table salt, and calcium chloride to match the closest water style for the beer on Beersmith. Finally I use the water treatment for beginners advice on here to calculate how much I need to adjust my alkalinity with using lactic acid.
Onto the mash. I heat up to the temperature suggested on Beersmith usually using a medium body BIAB mash. Whilst water heats up I give all my grain another grind through my corona mill.
Bag goes in and then I wait until I reach 69-79C (depending on the mash temp).
Grain goes in and then I use a big whisk and my plastic spoon to attack the clump of grain to really break it up. Then I wrap the kettle in a foil camping matt and leave it for the mash, between 60-90 mins. I'll only give the mash a stir once in that time, halfway through. I'm curious about the use of a pump here to recirculate the wort whilst keeping the heating element on to get a more stable temperature, any thoughts?
Once the mash is done I start mashing out and raise the temperature to 75-80C, this usually takes about 20 minutes. Once I reach that temperature I lift the bag up, let it mostly drain, and then dump it in another bucket. I then squeeze the bag in the bucket and leave it to drain a bit. What other techniques are available for this stage? A big colander to allow the bag to drain back into the kettle? What about brew in a basket? I'm also considering the use of a 'sparge' stage here to get an extra 4L into the boil, any tips for that?
After 5-10 minutes I'll pour the wort from that bucket into the kettle. Gravity reading taken and mash efficiency calculated, I usually hit at least 70%. My last brew was 75% efficiency.
Time to start the boil. Not much to say here, I usually boil for 60 minutes. Haven't tried a longer or shorter boil yet.
Once the boil is done my immersion cooler goes it. I'll cool down to about 80C for the whirlpool hops. My whirlpool technique involves spinning the wort and then throwing the hops in. I then wait 20 minutes occasionally giving it another spin. Curious about the use of a pump and a hop spider here. Recirculating the wort for 20 minutes while the hops site in a spider or similar filter vessel thing.
After the whirlpool I cool down to pitching temp, transfer to the FV, and pitch my rehydrated yeast. It then goes into a fridge with an Ink Bird controlling a heat tube to warm up and the fridge to cool down. After the krausen has subsided I throw in my dry hops. I don't use a secondary FV as this seems to have gone out of fashion. Is this the best way to dry hop?
Once fermentation is done I'll cold crash for a day or two and then bottle up using a bottling bucket.
Sorry for the wall of text, if you can be bothered to read it though some advice would be great! Thanks.
I use Beersmith to create my recipes. I use the water calculations on there. I start with half a campden tablet. Then I do alkalinity and calcium tests. I use as much gypsum, table salt, and calcium chloride to match the closest water style for the beer on Beersmith. Finally I use the water treatment for beginners advice on here to calculate how much I need to adjust my alkalinity with using lactic acid.
Onto the mash. I heat up to the temperature suggested on Beersmith usually using a medium body BIAB mash. Whilst water heats up I give all my grain another grind through my corona mill.
Bag goes in and then I wait until I reach 69-79C (depending on the mash temp).
Grain goes in and then I use a big whisk and my plastic spoon to attack the clump of grain to really break it up. Then I wrap the kettle in a foil camping matt and leave it for the mash, between 60-90 mins. I'll only give the mash a stir once in that time, halfway through. I'm curious about the use of a pump here to recirculate the wort whilst keeping the heating element on to get a more stable temperature, any thoughts?
Once the mash is done I start mashing out and raise the temperature to 75-80C, this usually takes about 20 minutes. Once I reach that temperature I lift the bag up, let it mostly drain, and then dump it in another bucket. I then squeeze the bag in the bucket and leave it to drain a bit. What other techniques are available for this stage? A big colander to allow the bag to drain back into the kettle? What about brew in a basket? I'm also considering the use of a 'sparge' stage here to get an extra 4L into the boil, any tips for that?
After 5-10 minutes I'll pour the wort from that bucket into the kettle. Gravity reading taken and mash efficiency calculated, I usually hit at least 70%. My last brew was 75% efficiency.
Time to start the boil. Not much to say here, I usually boil for 60 minutes. Haven't tried a longer or shorter boil yet.
Once the boil is done my immersion cooler goes it. I'll cool down to about 80C for the whirlpool hops. My whirlpool technique involves spinning the wort and then throwing the hops in. I then wait 20 minutes occasionally giving it another spin. Curious about the use of a pump and a hop spider here. Recirculating the wort for 20 minutes while the hops site in a spider or similar filter vessel thing.
After the whirlpool I cool down to pitching temp, transfer to the FV, and pitch my rehydrated yeast. It then goes into a fridge with an Ink Bird controlling a heat tube to warm up and the fridge to cool down. After the krausen has subsided I throw in my dry hops. I don't use a secondary FV as this seems to have gone out of fashion. Is this the best way to dry hop?
Once fermentation is done I'll cold crash for a day or two and then bottle up using a bottling bucket.
Sorry for the wall of text, if you can be bothered to read it though some advice would be great! Thanks.