Fore
Landlord.
A bit of a blog. Maybe I pass on some motivation; maybe you can give me more ideas.
I have a 36 quart or 34 litre mash tun in which I batch sparge (normal batch sparge, so double water load passed through). I have a 40 litre to the brim boiler, but 38 litre to the handle screws (practical limit I guess). I have 2x 27.5 litre primaries.
To date I have followed the norm and brewed to 23 litre. But I'm short on time and the most I can get out of each brew day, the better. So I started thinking about my limits.
I have rarely come close to topping out my mash tun, the nearest was a 7.2 kg grain bill, and that much in one brew is not my norm anyway. At that time I was using a higher liquor to grain ratio and even then I still had a bit of space.
I'm never anywhere near the top of my boiler. For my boil off and loss to trub, I'm aiming for between 31 to 34 litres pre-boil depending on ambient temperature and the hop addition.
I guess in theory I could push my fermenter right up to about 26 litres, if I used a blow off tube (which I recently put together).
I use 19 litre cornies, but have mini kegs and bottles for the extra. Not a hard limit then, but will just be a more complicated kegging/bottling day. I have thought strong about buying the 9 litre cornies and pushing to 26, maybe even adding a 30 litre fermenter and pushing to 28, maxing the 2 cornies, but that would be an expensive move.
One extra complication in all this is that I want to push out an extra 3 litres of sweet wort in every applicable brew to take away for later starters. That only touches the mash tun & the boiler, but I think it blows my 28 litre idea, as I think I would then start to struggle in the mash.
I'm taking each step at a time. To date I have successfully increased to a 24 litre brewday without any issue. Next I will try to increase sweet wort production by 3 litre and see how my mash tun holds up. Then I'll start adding a litre a time, aiming to max my fermenter. Anything I'm missing?
It certainly pays off to have a little extra capacity from the outset.
I have a 36 quart or 34 litre mash tun in which I batch sparge (normal batch sparge, so double water load passed through). I have a 40 litre to the brim boiler, but 38 litre to the handle screws (practical limit I guess). I have 2x 27.5 litre primaries.
To date I have followed the norm and brewed to 23 litre. But I'm short on time and the most I can get out of each brew day, the better. So I started thinking about my limits.
I have rarely come close to topping out my mash tun, the nearest was a 7.2 kg grain bill, and that much in one brew is not my norm anyway. At that time I was using a higher liquor to grain ratio and even then I still had a bit of space.
I'm never anywhere near the top of my boiler. For my boil off and loss to trub, I'm aiming for between 31 to 34 litres pre-boil depending on ambient temperature and the hop addition.
I guess in theory I could push my fermenter right up to about 26 litres, if I used a blow off tube (which I recently put together).
I use 19 litre cornies, but have mini kegs and bottles for the extra. Not a hard limit then, but will just be a more complicated kegging/bottling day. I have thought strong about buying the 9 litre cornies and pushing to 26, maybe even adding a 30 litre fermenter and pushing to 28, maxing the 2 cornies, but that would be an expensive move.
One extra complication in all this is that I want to push out an extra 3 litres of sweet wort in every applicable brew to take away for later starters. That only touches the mash tun & the boiler, but I think it blows my 28 litre idea, as I think I would then start to struggle in the mash.
I'm taking each step at a time. To date I have successfully increased to a 24 litre brewday without any issue. Next I will try to increase sweet wort production by 3 litre and see how my mash tun holds up. Then I'll start adding a litre a time, aiming to max my fermenter. Anything I'm missing?
It certainly pays off to have a little extra capacity from the outset.
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