MEB, I salute you, rarely-sober friend from the Southern Hemisphere :
I read this site about batch sparging:
http://www.bayareamashers.org/content/m ... arging.htm
Is this acurate to your procedures? and can you reach high efficiency?
After research and the help of all you kind folks, I have decided that
1) I mash with WAY too much water (easily corrected!)
2) my sparge method is half way between fly and batch sparging. I dump a lot of water into the mash tun at once, drain it fairly rapidly, and dump more when the level of water drops to 1 inch above the grain. This way, I can run errands or entertain my 2-year-old while sparging. But my mash tun won't accomodate the full amount of water all at once, so I essentially have to break my batch sparging into , 5 batches. Also, I don't stir the grains, as the above artical suggests. I bet that would increase efficiency, but I would fear leaching some tannins.
I think my next attempt will be my return to fly sparging, putting water in slowly and constantly, trying to match inflow to outflow and making sure the sparge lasts at least 1 hour. Also I have put a grain mill on my Christmas list.
I read this site about batch sparging:
http://www.bayareamashers.org/content/m ... arging.htm
Is this acurate to your procedures? and can you reach high efficiency?
After research and the help of all you kind folks, I have decided that
1) I mash with WAY too much water (easily corrected!)
2) my sparge method is half way between fly and batch sparging. I dump a lot of water into the mash tun at once, drain it fairly rapidly, and dump more when the level of water drops to 1 inch above the grain. This way, I can run errands or entertain my 2-year-old while sparging. But my mash tun won't accomodate the full amount of water all at once, so I essentially have to break my batch sparging into , 5 batches. Also, I don't stir the grains, as the above artical suggests. I bet that would increase efficiency, but I would fear leaching some tannins.
I think my next attempt will be my return to fly sparging, putting water in slowly and constantly, trying to match inflow to outflow and making sure the sparge lasts at least 1 hour. Also I have put a grain mill on my Christmas list.