Just had a smart meter fitted and to run a B2B heat pad costs £0.01 pence per hour.
I might buy several and tape them onto my cold bits
Just had a smart meter fitted and to run a B2B heat pad costs £0.01 pence per hour.
I remember, many years ago, an elderly eccentric being interviewed on the radio. He'd made a full body suit out of an electric blanket and so didn't need to heat his house at all.I might buy several and tape them onto my cold bits
PMSL..I might buy several and tape them onto my cold bits
Let's see how it turned out. (I didn't do this to save money, just curious whether it affects the beer)
I think you've missed the point in "the need for an uncovered boil is a myth".Anyway, long story short, I left the lid on the Grainfather today (it still has a 2" hole in it that steam escaped from).
So would I.Interested to hear how it turns out, because if it doesn’t affect the beer, it’s saved money!
The boil isn't just about hops,and I would like to see evidence an uncovered boil is a myth. A covered boil will condensate DMS on the lid. even with a 50 mm hole. A more violent boil will drive off volatile's, all the DMS doesn't get driven off during the boil a lot of whats left is removed during fermentation.I've experimented with this latest brew.
In theory, "you don't need a rigorous boil" as long as the boil is sufficiently agitating the hops, and "the need for an uncovered boil is a myth" because all the bad volatiles (DMS etc) have a sufficiently low boiling point that they still get driven off past the lid.
Anyway, long story short, I left the lid on the Grainfather today (it still has a 2" hole in it that steam escaped from). With the insulated jacket for the boiler, I ran at 35% power for the boil today.
Let's see how it turned out. (I didn't do this to save money, just curious whether it affects the beer)
That's just the lid the GF comes with! I wasn't really trying to investigate the myth completely, just leaving the lid (with a hole) on. It meant my utility room was less like a sauna at the end of the boil than normal.I think you've missed the point in "the need for an uncovered boil is a myth".
I dispute this. DMS has a low boiling point (30-40°). It may initially condense on the lid and drop back, but pretty quickly, the water condensing on the lid will raise the temperature of the lid to roughly 100°. This means the DMS can't condense on the lid and will continue to get driven off as normal.A covered boil will condensate DMS on the lid. even with a 50 mm hole.
https://brulosophy.com/2016/10/31/the-boil-lid-on-vs-lid-off-exbeeriment-results/...I would like to see evidence an uncovered boil is a myth.
Bwahahahahahaha.... He even admits this experiment was inconclusive.
Are you reading the same article as me?Bwahahahahahaha.... He even admits this experiment was inconclusive.
A total of 20 people of varying levels of experience participated in this xBmt. Each participant was served 2 samples of the lid-on beer and 1 sample of the lid-off beer then asked to identify the sample that was unique. Given the sample size, 11 tasters (p<0.05) would have had to correctly identify the lid-off beer as being different in order to reach statistical significance. A total of 8 tasters (p=0.34) accurately identified the unique sample, indicating panelists were unable to reliably distinguish a beer in which the wort was boiled with the lid on from the same beer in which the boil occurred with the lid off.
Enter your email address to join: