Help me out here folks, i always seem to end up with shedloads of trub - am i doing something wrong or is this just par for the course? Can you see if you can debug my process?
I'm all grain brewing but ~12L batches. I'm really enjoying my hobby, the beer tastes good, it's bright and it's clear - so if it ain't broke don't fix it you might well say.
True, but it'd be good to improve my yield a little - i normally get ~19 x 500ml bottles but there's more beer soaked into all that trub. Also, I'm starting to harvest yeast from the cake - less crud and more yeast in the cake would make that simpler.
Here's my process:
1. Mash in my brew kettle in the oven around 65degC for 1 hour, stirring at half time.
2. Pour the wort into an FV using a grain bag to separate the grain.
3. Grain bag goes back in the brew kettle in the oven for a 10min dunk sparge at 80degC
4. Add this wort to the FV and squeeze the grain bag like hell to get as much liquid out as possible.
5. Boil on the kitchen gas hob - typically 1 hour, adding hops as required (only used pellets to date). I don't skim off any foam or break material.
6. Add half a protofloc tablet 10-15 mins before end of boil
7. Chill wort with immersion chiller - typically only 5-10mins. At this point i usually notice crystal clear wort on top, and small pale globules just beneath the surface - it all gets mixed up if i move the chiller around a little to aid mixing & cooling.
8. Pour contents of kettle into a sanitised FV - i once tried putting through a sieve to filter out some crud, but the sieve just clogged up and the trub was same as always. So everything from the brew kettle goes in the FV.
9. Pitch the yeast and seal it up - dry hop if required - bottle when done, typically after 2-3 weeks.
Below is my Czech Pilsner just after pitching. You can see the line of trub around 5.5L, though this has now compacted down to 3.5L - better, but that's still a big dent in my overall yield.
The only solution i can think of is to go no chill and syphon the clear wort into the FV next day and leave the crud behind. Or just brew stronger and then liquor back in the FV to compensate for trub losses!
Though i do wonder if draining slowly from a picnic cooler mash/sparge tun would leave more behind, and similarly for those who have a larger brew kettle with a drain tap at the bottom, would that leave more crud behind.
Any tips welcome!
Cheers,
Matt
I'm all grain brewing but ~12L batches. I'm really enjoying my hobby, the beer tastes good, it's bright and it's clear - so if it ain't broke don't fix it you might well say.
True, but it'd be good to improve my yield a little - i normally get ~19 x 500ml bottles but there's more beer soaked into all that trub. Also, I'm starting to harvest yeast from the cake - less crud and more yeast in the cake would make that simpler.
Here's my process:
1. Mash in my brew kettle in the oven around 65degC for 1 hour, stirring at half time.
2. Pour the wort into an FV using a grain bag to separate the grain.
3. Grain bag goes back in the brew kettle in the oven for a 10min dunk sparge at 80degC
4. Add this wort to the FV and squeeze the grain bag like hell to get as much liquid out as possible.
5. Boil on the kitchen gas hob - typically 1 hour, adding hops as required (only used pellets to date). I don't skim off any foam or break material.
6. Add half a protofloc tablet 10-15 mins before end of boil
7. Chill wort with immersion chiller - typically only 5-10mins. At this point i usually notice crystal clear wort on top, and small pale globules just beneath the surface - it all gets mixed up if i move the chiller around a little to aid mixing & cooling.
8. Pour contents of kettle into a sanitised FV - i once tried putting through a sieve to filter out some crud, but the sieve just clogged up and the trub was same as always. So everything from the brew kettle goes in the FV.
9. Pitch the yeast and seal it up - dry hop if required - bottle when done, typically after 2-3 weeks.
Below is my Czech Pilsner just after pitching. You can see the line of trub around 5.5L, though this has now compacted down to 3.5L - better, but that's still a big dent in my overall yield.
The only solution i can think of is to go no chill and syphon the clear wort into the FV next day and leave the crud behind. Or just brew stronger and then liquor back in the FV to compensate for trub losses!
Though i do wonder if draining slowly from a picnic cooler mash/sparge tun would leave more behind, and similarly for those who have a larger brew kettle with a drain tap at the bottom, would that leave more crud behind.
Any tips welcome!
Cheers,
Matt