Another brewzilla question.

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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.
 
Well it wont be the definative answer - But what i do is -
Set the initial temperature to a few degrees above the desired mash temp, as adding the malt pipe and the grain will loose me a few degrees - Normally i just set to 70 as this gives me enough 'headroom' for any mash temp but you can actually work it out exactly.
I actually fill the brewzilla to 30 litres and then remove the excess liquid for sparging later.

I use both elements to get up to 70 . then reset the target temp to the desired mash temperature, still have both elements on.

Leave the malt pipe out until I am adding the grain.

Put pipe in and add grain etc.. the temp will drop and when it gets to (66 in your example) elements will kick in to maintain.

I always leave the mash 10 minutes before starting the circulation to ensure that the grain bed is settled. (yu can either count this towards your mash time or not dont think it makes much of a difference)

The only time i have needed to recirculate whilst mashing in was when i had a large grain bill but for an average 5kg grain bill its not necessary. Consider adding rice hulls if you have them - I add them every time irispective of grain make up.
 
Last edited:
Very similar to Rwilts
I bring to 2 degrees above mash temp to allow for grain temp drop(i put my grain in a warm room to minimise temp drop) then mash in let it settle for 10 mins and drop the to mash temp and then drop machine heater down to about 45/50% for the mash with re-circ.
Ps I always heat the water with the malt pipe in for 2 reasons further temp drop if it is cols and 2 forgetting to put it in before adding the grain-been there done thataheadbutt
 
Having also left the malt pipe out once ! its a good option - for me , i prefer to see the volume of water in the boiler and , although completely unjustified, don't want the malt pipe to remove the water capacity -- I just remember the horror when i realised what I did and make sure it goes in :)
 
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.
Have a look what Kai says on Braukaiser. Brew house efficiency. Dough in below your saccharification rest temperature to preserve the beta amylase enzymes which degrade quickly.
Keep your malt pipe in while heating as that is another source of heat exchange.
If I am mashing at 67C I dough in at 66C and I am recirculating at the same time.
Doesn’t matter if the temperature drops a couple of degrees, when the temperature hits target start the mash.
 
This is how I always did it Foxy until I got he Brewzilla Gen4 and the opinion seems to be to let the mash settle before circulation for 10 minutes so that is what I have been doing.
What is your opinion on this for the Gen4
 
This is how I always did it Foxy until I got he Brewzilla Gen4 and the opinion seems to be to let the mash settle before circulation for 10 minutes so that is what I have been doing.
What is your opinion on this for the Gen4
When doughing in, as with the mash I would be looking for an even temperature throughout. There is what is known as thermal stratification in water where water separates into different temperatures and densities. The beta-amylase denatures quickly as temperatures rise. So for any vessel, I would prefer an even temperature which circulation helps to achieve.
Ashton Lewis ( Mr Wizard )who is a master brewer and has been a brewer for over 30 years says he always doughs in at 32C and then raises the temperature to his saccharification temperature.
 
When doughing in, as with the mash I would be looking for an even temperature throughout. There is what is known as thermal stratification in water where water separates into different temperatures and densities. The beta-amylase denatures quickly as temperatures rise. So for any vessel, I would prefer an even temperature which circulation helps to achieve.
Ashton Lewis ( Mr Wizard )who is a master brewer and has been a brewer for over 30 years says he always doughs in at 32C and then raises the temperature to his saccharification temperature.

Interesting 🤔
 

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