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- Oct 6, 2019
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Hello all,
Any advice and opinions are very welcome! I've done 20 or so stove top BIAB brews to date and feel like my mashing process is quite reliable.
What I'm struggling with is the amount of trub I'm left with. The last 2 brews were pretty similar ingredients.
The first one I just chucked the hops in, a small amount of bettering and quite a lot as a hop stand at 80deg. Once cooled, I have a small immersion chiller, I just poured the lot into the fermenter, pitched the yeast and put it in the fridge with an Inkbird controller. There was a lot of trub! Add to this over 100g of dry hopping and there must have been 2.5 - 3 inches of stuff in the bottom of the fermenter.
The next brew I decided to strain the wort on the way into the fermenter. It proved to be a real pain, as I've found in the past. I use a Wilko Straining bag, which I think are for wine, and it just blocks up and you have to keep staring it so the liquid passes through. It ended up taking a fair amount of time and I think it was at the detriment to the beer.
The first brew was quite a lot better....
I know I could use a hop spider and bags for the dry hops but I've found I get better flavour without, and the hops only account for a small amount of the trub.
What do other people do and is there a certain size mesh/ filter that works well without getting as blocked as a straining bag?
Sorry for all the waffle, and thanks in advance for any advice. Cheers Oli
Any advice and opinions are very welcome! I've done 20 or so stove top BIAB brews to date and feel like my mashing process is quite reliable.
What I'm struggling with is the amount of trub I'm left with. The last 2 brews were pretty similar ingredients.
The first one I just chucked the hops in, a small amount of bettering and quite a lot as a hop stand at 80deg. Once cooled, I have a small immersion chiller, I just poured the lot into the fermenter, pitched the yeast and put it in the fridge with an Inkbird controller. There was a lot of trub! Add to this over 100g of dry hopping and there must have been 2.5 - 3 inches of stuff in the bottom of the fermenter.
The next brew I decided to strain the wort on the way into the fermenter. It proved to be a real pain, as I've found in the past. I use a Wilko Straining bag, which I think are for wine, and it just blocks up and you have to keep staring it so the liquid passes through. It ended up taking a fair amount of time and I think it was at the detriment to the beer.
The first brew was quite a lot better....
I know I could use a hop spider and bags for the dry hops but I've found I get better flavour without, and the hops only account for a small amount of the trub.
What do other people do and is there a certain size mesh/ filter that works well without getting as blocked as a straining bag?
Sorry for all the waffle, and thanks in advance for any advice. Cheers Oli