When fininshed there was some hop sludge in the spider and yes it wasnt the easiest thing to clean.
Turn it upside down outside and blast it with a hosepipe. 2 mins and done.
When fininshed there was some hop sludge in the spider and yes it wasnt the easiest thing to clean.
I’m only three brews in with the Brewzilla and so not properly tried a taste test but despite the extra crud going into the FV it doesn’t seem to make a difference to the clarity of the finished beer. I always cold crash for a couple of days before kegging so it just seems that whereby I used to lose a couple of litres of wort to the kettle I now gain this into the FV only to lose it there when kegging.I have found that, seems better when using more hops as they seem to provide a filter on the false bottom. And leaf hops better than pellets. Not sure if the break material causes issues with final beer quality?
Sounds very similar to my experience.I’m only three brews in with the Brewzilla and so not properly tried a taste test but despite the extra crud going into the FV it doesn’t seem to make a difference to the clarity of the finished beer. I always cold crash for a couple of days before kegging so it just seems that whereby I used to lose a couple of litres of wort to the kettle I now gain this into the FV only to lose it there when kegging.
I used to use the tap, but since using a snubnose fermenter which is taller I have had to use the pump now. I think either way is fine.Out of curiosity who transfers using the pump?
Yep a key reason for whirpooling is from larger brewery set ups to clump debris together and as a hopping stage, however the effectiveness of the clumping in a brewzilla type device with a false bottom can be slightly limited. It can help though. Overall though, for keeping things as clear as possible, I find setting up grain/water qtys to ensure I have enough wort going in to the fermenter without tilting the Brewzilla forward when transferring (ie calculating in 2.1 litres extra for that deadspace below the tap) and then holding a standard kitchen type sieve between the tap and the fermenter as I transfer, which catches any excess debris (in reality very little). I use the standard Hop Spider as well which helps keeps things cleaner. So yes, I see the whirlpool arm mainly as an essential cooling aid and to help with whirlpool hops more than anything else.My first 2 brews I had the coil sat in the wort and as you said it takes a while.
Only before my 3rd brew did I see someone mention you are best to move the coil around and I found this cut the cooling time maybe in half.
So the whirlpool is used in the cooling stage? I thought it was also meant to help "clump" the debris together. I thought I had read maybe during the hop stand?
The reason for my original question is on this forum there seems to have been very little mention...that ive seen anyway.
The pump is great but because its base mounted there is a better chance of getting trub passed through to your FV and personally it doesn't bother me but it may some, whereas using the tap you are leaving any debris behind.I used to use the tap, but since using a snubnose fermenter which is taller I have had to use the pump now. I think either way is fine.
I use a 12v heat rated pump in line for my burco so when the valve is open and the pump is primed it will pump direct or can use as a recirculating pump.Mine should be delivered tomorrow too.....
Clearly I don't know yet, but . . . . in order to reduce trub to FV can we do either of these:
- Pull the wort from above the bottom via the tap?
or
- Pull the wort and break material using the pump first into another container. When it runs clear(er), pump wort into FV. Allow the break to settle in the first container and then add the clear wort to the FV?
Whirlpool and let everything settle, it might take an hour or more, time spent stowing away the gear and getting the fermenter ready. Making a dip tube and incorporating a reducer 8mm or less opening along with choking the tap so you get a slow steady flow will get clear wort into the fermenter. If you get your target fermenter volume then nothing is lost, a few cents worth of wort remaining in the kettle, so what.
If you want to save the wort pour off the remaining wort into a jug, let it settle (the fridge is best) boil then either bottle for a starter or if you missed your target put it into the fermenter.
The Cat - I'm new to both Brewzilla and brewing. There are loads of videos on YouTube covering it so easy to see how its done. I'm impatient and just launched myself into it and so far so good. No disasters yet!
The only mod I'm doing so far is to get a couple of mesh plug strainers, one to put over the overflow tube (as seen on David Heath Homebrew YouTube channel) as I do get some grist in the overflowing wort so just helps keep it out of the bottom section and potentially scorching the heating elements, and I'll put a second one over the pump inlet as a belt and braces measure to prevent any hop matter that gets past the false bottom getting through if there is enough space under the false bottom. It seems if you whirlpool it can disturb the fast bottom and let stuff through.
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