moto748
Landlord.
- Joined
- Jul 15, 2010
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Reading several threads lately about attempts to install a whirlpool system of some sort, along with the envy I always feel when I see these pix of posters' beautifully clear wort sitting a hydrometer jar got me thinking.
I have no whirlpool, and my wort is generally pretty cloudy, although I never saw that as a big problem. But my practice has always been to open the tap in the boiler and empty it into the FV (plastic bucket) as soon as the boil is finished. And it may well be that it did that partly to actually get most of the sediment out of the boiler, to facilitate boiler cleaning.
Would I be better off to just give the wort a good stir at the end of the boil, and then leave it for half an hour or so before draining it into the FV? And it also struck me that if there was any hop-stand to be done, why couldn't I incorporate that at that stage, and do that in the boiler too? The idea being to leave more of the hop debris etc behind in the boiler.
Sorry if this all sounds like very obvious stuff, but I am just trying to refine my technique.
I have no whirlpool, and my wort is generally pretty cloudy, although I never saw that as a big problem. But my practice has always been to open the tap in the boiler and empty it into the FV (plastic bucket) as soon as the boil is finished. And it may well be that it did that partly to actually get most of the sediment out of the boiler, to facilitate boiler cleaning.
Would I be better off to just give the wort a good stir at the end of the boil, and then leave it for half an hour or so before draining it into the FV? And it also struck me that if there was any hop-stand to be done, why couldn't I incorporate that at that stage, and do that in the boiler too? The idea being to leave more of the hop debris etc behind in the boiler.
Sorry if this all sounds like very obvious stuff, but I am just trying to refine my technique.
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