I have a pan that will hold (filled to the brim) 25ltr, clearly the bag of incredients will displace some of the water so:rich27500 said:Good skills, it works. Feel free to ask for advice
Thanks Rich,rich27500 said:Displacement depends on how much grain you use as does adding sugars. If you were sticking to just grain (which you should IMHO,) then around 4kg is enough to make 4-5% beers. To be on the safe side I'd allow a litre per kilo in terms of displacement. You can set water aside at mash temp and top up after if you want. You can just add cold water to get your desired volume/gravity most people prefer to use cooled boiled water if they do this. Pitching at 27c is a bit hot and the yeast goes in when in the fv not before.
Here's the best guide I've seen for maxi BIAB http://www.biabrewer.info/viewtopic.php?f=89&t=352
rich27500 said:Good skills, it works. Feel free to ask for advice
I thought i was getting the hang of all the lingo but i have a Q?fbsf said:rich27500 said:Good skills, it works. Feel free to ask for advice
Sorry Rich, but I also have a Q.
I'm planning on using BIAB for my next beer - a high ABV Double IPA. It's only going to be a short brew - 12L or so, but is this sort of thing doable with BIAB?
I'm guessing that I'll lose about 4.5L to the grain (4.5kg), 3L to the hops and 3.5L to the boil, so I'll need to start with about 23L. Should I be looking at mashing with 13L then sparging with 2x 5L ish, or do a single sparge of 10L?
Cheers fbsf :fbsf said:I have a Q - I have a question.
Basically, what I was asking was whether Brew In A Bag - BIAB - was suitable for higher alcohol brews as well as standard brews.
The brew I'm planning will come out at about 9% alcohol, so will need quite a strong wort.
When you add the water to start the mash, some of it gets absorbed by the grain and stays there - which is the "loss to the grain" I mention.
Similarly, some also gets absorbed by the hops when they are boiled. Finally, some gets boiled off as water vapour, so you basically need to work out how much water to start with, to get a final amount ready for fermentation.
Lastly, the Sparge is rinsing the grains after they have soaked ("mashed") so you get as much of the sugary liquid off of them as possible.
Does that make any more sense? I have a habit of rambling a little :
I've wiki'd the answer, and that makes sense.Kinleycat said:Cheers fbsf :fbsf said:I have a Q - I have a question.
Basically, what I was asking was whether Brew In A Bag - BIAB - was suitable for higher alcohol brews as well as standard brews.
The brew I'm planning will come out at about 9% alcohol, so will need quite a strong wort.
When you add the water to start the mash, some of it gets absorbed by the grain and stays there - which is the "loss to the grain" I mention.
Similarly, some also gets absorbed by the hops when they are boiled. Finally, some gets boiled off as water vapour, so you basically need to work out how much water to start with, to get a final amount ready for fermentation.
Lastly, the Sparge is rinsing the grains after they have soaked ("mashed") so you get as much of the sugary liquid off of them as possible.
Does that make any more sense? I have a habit of rambling a little :
As clear as a foggy day in a coal cellar all that!!! :lol: :lol:
The water lost to the grain and hops etc, is this lost from the overall end liquid or does it need to be re added?
Eg. If i wanted to end up with say 20ltrs does it not matter how much you start with (within reason) if you have the right volume of ingredients and cook for the right time and add supplementary water to get the right total liquid i.e 20ltrs.
In theory the concentration of the grain in less water (a stronger wort) would be rectified by the additional dilution of the added water.
I think!!, ive confused myself in the end :lol: :lol:
Whats a sparge?
:thumb:
Kinleycat said:Kinleycat said:Cheers fbsf :
As clear as a foggy day in a coal cellar all that!!! :lol: :lol:
Enter your email address to join: