I did brew number two yesterday (a citra pale ale) in my new HERMS system :party:
I found I had a serious loss of efficiency in the mash, ending up around 7 points below target gravity in the kettle.
When I'd finished sparging I noticed the grain bed was not flat, it was peaked in the middle. I know why this is happening, but my question is do people usually flatten the bed out after recirculation to ensure the sparge washes through the whole thing? I'm thinking my poor efficiency was due to the sparge water finding the easiest way through the mash (down the sides) and therefore missing out the bit in the middle.
I used to have a rotating sparge arm but with the new system everything goes through a pipe that rests on the grain bed.
Cheers
I found I had a serious loss of efficiency in the mash, ending up around 7 points below target gravity in the kettle.
When I'd finished sparging I noticed the grain bed was not flat, it was peaked in the middle. I know why this is happening, but my question is do people usually flatten the bed out after recirculation to ensure the sparge washes through the whole thing? I'm thinking my poor efficiency was due to the sparge water finding the easiest way through the mash (down the sides) and therefore missing out the bit in the middle.
I used to have a rotating sparge arm but with the new system everything goes through a pipe that rests on the grain bed.
Cheers