dannythemanny
Well-Known Member
Hi all,
I used to brew with separate vessels - a HLT, mash tun and separate kettle. I would batch sparge and achieve around 80% efficiency fairly consistently.
In the interests of space, I moved to an all-in-one system - a Klarstein Brauheld Pro. I have been having wildy varying efficiency with it, which is incredibly frustrating. When I brew smaller grain bills, I get pretty decent efficiency - high 70s. A little over 4kg, and it drops to low 70s. Today, I brewed with 6.5kg and if my calculations are correct, I got a measly 45%.
I wouldn't mind having a low efficiency system if only it was consistent. As it is, I would have achieved the same OG today had I used 4kg instead of 6.5kg!
In determining my water calculations, I tend to try to make the mash thin so that the ratio *inside* the grain basket is as close to 3.2L/kg as I can get (or higher if I can). My reasoning for this is that when I brew smaller beers, I get decent efficiency with this approach - eg. 4.1kg of grain with 28L of strike water gives a ratio of 6.8L/kg, or 4.15L/kg inside the grain basket (if my dodgy maths are correct), 3.45kg of grain with 24L of strike water gives a ratio of 7.05L/kg, or 4.12L/kg inside the grain basket (again, if my dodgy maths are correct). I sparge to top up to 30L so that I end up with 25L in the kettle post-boil.
When I've tried a bit more grain, here is an example of what I get: 5.3kg of grain with 27L of strike water gives a ratio (total/inside grain basket) or 5.14/3.09 L/kg and efficiency of only 65%. Thinking I was maybe under-sparging in favour of a thinner mash, I thought I'd try a thicker mash that would allow me to have more room to sparge: 7.25kg of grain with 23L of strike water giving a mash ratio of 3.14/1.8 L/kg. This brought efficiency down to 53%, so I thought I'd try the opposite today and tried to mash 6.5kg of grain with as much strike water as I could fit - 28.5L, giving a ratio of 4.43/2.7 L/kg (outside/inside). I make this 45% efficiency!
It's pretty maddening to think that I got an OG of 1.049 from 4.3kg of pilsner malt and carapils and today only 1.041 from 6.5kg of the exact same grain! These two grain bills are very similar: the first is a 98/2% ratio and the other 96/4% and I did a simple mash of 40C - 60C - 70C (30 mins at each) in both cases.
I'm pretty bummed out about this because I don't know what the culprit is. I suppose the system simply isn't large enough to reliably brew anything above 5-ish%, which seems a shame. But I think I might be missing something... I do buy grain pre-crushed, so maybe I should buy a mill and go from there...? But these discrepancies are present between the different grain bills using grain from the same bag, so maybe not. Maybe I need to be a lot more precise with dialling in the water for this system, but having tried both extremes and not seeing a lot of difference with either, I doubt that's the issue either, tbh.
Anyone else had this kind of issue with one of these systems, and did you find a workaround? I've seen the "double mash" idea of mashing the grain in stages (eg. for a grain bill of 8kg, mash 4kg, remove it, and mash the other 4kg in the wort from the first mash). This strikes me as a bit of a pain because I'd be looking at an extra hour minimum on brew day. I was wondering if there might be some way of batch sparging when I'm aiming for OG over 1.045..? I can't figure it out if there is, though!
I used to brew with separate vessels - a HLT, mash tun and separate kettle. I would batch sparge and achieve around 80% efficiency fairly consistently.
In the interests of space, I moved to an all-in-one system - a Klarstein Brauheld Pro. I have been having wildy varying efficiency with it, which is incredibly frustrating. When I brew smaller grain bills, I get pretty decent efficiency - high 70s. A little over 4kg, and it drops to low 70s. Today, I brewed with 6.5kg and if my calculations are correct, I got a measly 45%.
I wouldn't mind having a low efficiency system if only it was consistent. As it is, I would have achieved the same OG today had I used 4kg instead of 6.5kg!
In determining my water calculations, I tend to try to make the mash thin so that the ratio *inside* the grain basket is as close to 3.2L/kg as I can get (or higher if I can). My reasoning for this is that when I brew smaller beers, I get decent efficiency with this approach - eg. 4.1kg of grain with 28L of strike water gives a ratio of 6.8L/kg, or 4.15L/kg inside the grain basket (if my dodgy maths are correct), 3.45kg of grain with 24L of strike water gives a ratio of 7.05L/kg, or 4.12L/kg inside the grain basket (again, if my dodgy maths are correct). I sparge to top up to 30L so that I end up with 25L in the kettle post-boil.
When I've tried a bit more grain, here is an example of what I get: 5.3kg of grain with 27L of strike water gives a ratio (total/inside grain basket) or 5.14/3.09 L/kg and efficiency of only 65%. Thinking I was maybe under-sparging in favour of a thinner mash, I thought I'd try a thicker mash that would allow me to have more room to sparge: 7.25kg of grain with 23L of strike water giving a mash ratio of 3.14/1.8 L/kg. This brought efficiency down to 53%, so I thought I'd try the opposite today and tried to mash 6.5kg of grain with as much strike water as I could fit - 28.5L, giving a ratio of 4.43/2.7 L/kg (outside/inside). I make this 45% efficiency!
It's pretty maddening to think that I got an OG of 1.049 from 4.3kg of pilsner malt and carapils and today only 1.041 from 6.5kg of the exact same grain! These two grain bills are very similar: the first is a 98/2% ratio and the other 96/4% and I did a simple mash of 40C - 60C - 70C (30 mins at each) in both cases.
I'm pretty bummed out about this because I don't know what the culprit is. I suppose the system simply isn't large enough to reliably brew anything above 5-ish%, which seems a shame. But I think I might be missing something... I do buy grain pre-crushed, so maybe I should buy a mill and go from there...? But these discrepancies are present between the different grain bills using grain from the same bag, so maybe not. Maybe I need to be a lot more precise with dialling in the water for this system, but having tried both extremes and not seeing a lot of difference with either, I doubt that's the issue either, tbh.
Anyone else had this kind of issue with one of these systems, and did you find a workaround? I've seen the "double mash" idea of mashing the grain in stages (eg. for a grain bill of 8kg, mash 4kg, remove it, and mash the other 4kg in the wort from the first mash). This strikes me as a bit of a pain because I'd be looking at an extra hour minimum on brew day. I was wondering if there might be some way of batch sparging when I'm aiming for OG over 1.045..? I can't figure it out if there is, though!