I tried a new technique with my Ace boiler yesterday. I did a really big IPA, mashing in the boiler WITHOUT a grain bag. I just put in 15 litres of mash water, brought it to a measured 78C (I don't trust the accuracy of the thermostat cut-off) and then emptied in and stirred 6KG of grain into the bare boiler. As I said above, I am reluctant to use the element during the mash so I cover the boiler with a sleeping bag and wait out the hour. Even on a foul, cold wet day, at the end of the hour the mash was at 64C.
I drained the boiler into a ready cleaned FV, and sparged twice. First with 10 litres for twenty minutes and then with about 8 litres of 75C sparge water, stirring the grains steadily each time in the sparge water and then draining off each batch into the FV on the floor under the ACE boiler which stands on a sturdy chest.
I then swilled out the boiler into my compost bin and cleaned it up for the boil. This only took about three minutes with a hose on hand ready.
This leaves me with more runnings than I can fit into the boiler without it coming over the top, but I put about 25litres into the boiler and started the heating up and boil, and put the rest, maybe about 7 litres onto the stove in my Wilco pot and brought that to the boil as the Ace boiled off in the normal way. Both lots of runnings are boiling at the same time, but as the Ace evaporates away, I top up from the stove pot.
My wort came in at 1062 SG which was much better than I expected.
Unfortunately, I had a minor boil over near the end of the boil when I put the ACE lid half on and went down to the house for something. This meant that I ended up slightly shy of my aimed for 23 litres, so I added back just under two litres of boiled water and ended up with a SG of 1060, which will still produce a mighty IPA at about 6.8% and in the bottle, 7% with the carbonation sugar factored in. I am assuming that the fermentation will bring the SG down to 1010 with those estimates. It usually ends about there in my brews.
This mashing technique without the bag allows a more thorough rinsing of the sugars off the grain than my previous method of rinsing the bag in a FV with hot water. The same grain bill ten days ago produced an OG of 1052, nearly a whole percentage point ABV or about 15% lighter in the final beer.
The essential thing here is you need somewhere to dump the spent grain and water when swilling out the ace after mashing. My compost bin is ideal for that.
Sounds like you have raised your efficiency from the low 60s to low 70s :thumb:.
Surprised that the bag makes that much difference but whatever works I suppose. You are doing a more traditional way of brewing I suppose..
You see whereas I now (as you know I decided to go gas after my ace) I have a big pot (50l) 33 or so liters of strike water, bag in with grains , mash.. then raise temp to 75. stir wait a bit raise bag and boil..
Different ways achieves teh same thing, how did you get on with the filter??
If I remember since the ace diameter isn't huge the filter is quite small and teh tape doesn't leave a lot of dead space, you could try and fashion some kind of hop spider?? that might actually work out pretty well in the ace boiler..