Hi all,
I'm trying to get my head around the order of events for best results/clarity...
My understanding is that:
- whirlpooling is effective in getting unwanted matter to the center of the kettle/all-in-one to avoid bringing it across to the fermenter
- chilling quickly allows the cold break to form, which would ideally also be left in the kettle
- when using a counterflow chiller, the wort can be passed almost directly from kettle to fermenter, but that cold break will occur as this transfer happens (and so the cold break would go into the fermenter)
So on this basis, is the correct order:
- Counterflow back into the kettle for a "full pass" (not sure how i would know this is complete?) so that the cold break goes into the kettle
- Pause the chilling, whirlpool, and allow the wort to rest
- Restart the counterflow chiller, and pump straight across to the fermenter hopefully leaving the unwanted elements behind
I feel like I'm making this more complicated than it needs to be!
Thanks!
I'm trying to get my head around the order of events for best results/clarity...
My understanding is that:
- whirlpooling is effective in getting unwanted matter to the center of the kettle/all-in-one to avoid bringing it across to the fermenter
- chilling quickly allows the cold break to form, which would ideally also be left in the kettle
- when using a counterflow chiller, the wort can be passed almost directly from kettle to fermenter, but that cold break will occur as this transfer happens (and so the cold break would go into the fermenter)
So on this basis, is the correct order:
- Counterflow back into the kettle for a "full pass" (not sure how i would know this is complete?) so that the cold break goes into the kettle
- Pause the chilling, whirlpool, and allow the wort to rest
- Restart the counterflow chiller, and pump straight across to the fermenter hopefully leaving the unwanted elements behind
I feel like I'm making this more complicated than it needs to be!
Thanks!