Alside101
Landlord.
I bought a lager ag kit and did not realise that the grains were un crushed so i blitzed in the blender and brewed a 3% lager that was suposesto be 5.5%
That sounds more or less what a grainfather does so the process itself ought to be sound.I think I'm trying to do is a full volume mash BIAB and recirculate from the tap in the Klarstein back into the top of the thing... is that what normal people do?!
Same idea except a grainfather isn't a full volume mash. Think the process of full volume BIAB is called something like maxi-biab. Fairly sure folks on her have discussed it before.That sounds more or less what a grainfather does so the process itself ought to be sound.
Ah thanks Dutto, but also i'm sorry as i'm probably confusing us all!
What I think I'm trying to do is a full volume mash BIAB and recirculate from the tap in the Klarstein back into the top of the thing... is that what normal people do?!
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........., it packed up 5 minutes before the end of boiling it. lol
The problem with doing true full volume, you're hugely limited to how much you can get into the FV by the size of the boiler, they're so darned small! I have the same problem with my current boiler, and that's actually bigger than my old ACE and the Klarsteins... lol So I always cheat.
I think the trick with full volume is to have a vessel at least twice the capacity of what you want to put into the FV.. Otherwise you end up messing about with alterations topping up or boiling in another vessel or having a sparge.. All of which is fine but mitigates the point and simplicity of doing the full volume.
edit perhaps I am being a bit OTT with twice but it does allow you freedome to brew what you want. if you want to get 20L+ in the FV you'll need a 40+L preferably 50l
I quite agree, I was frustrated by the tiny size of my ACE, and am still frustrated by the size of my 33 litre. I was hoping to eventually add something like a 50 litre Brew Devil to my kit, but that's looking unlikely now, so I've switched my hopes to hoping to get a 50 litre stock pot that I can convert to a bigger boiler. I already have a controller now that I could use for mashing control, I'd just need to use a different lead for the boil (as a 50 litre pan would need a 3kw element, which would likely overload the cables and fuses on my controller when ran at full power, but would be fine run at reduce power via my build in power regulator. ).
They're been a bit misleading with things like the Klarstein mash tun boilers, when they claim you can get a 23 litre batch out of them, as usually the max fill line is 27 litres.... Heck, my 33 litre kit I can just about cope with a mash volume of 27 litres (higher and I risk a tiny bit of dribbling from the wicking effect between the lid and bag), and a boil volume of slightly over 29 litres. It's ok if you like really weak beer I guess... I tend to brew nothing below about 4.2%, more often around the 5% mark though... So I use tricks to get extra volume, the best of which so far has been the cold water dunk sparge (gave me 6.6 litres of liquor with an SG of 1.030, which is far better than 6.6 litres of water any day....). It's scary when you first start brewing though, you see all these DIY builds with people wiring up elements etc and you think "eek! If I try that I'll end up burning my house down!", then you see what looks like a really cool bit of equipment, all ready to use and purpose built for the job, and ooh it says it'll produce 23 litres of beer just like the kits, ooh and the price isn't bad either! Then you get it home and discover you bought a glorified tea urn that can barely manage 18 litres of a decent strength beer unless you start learning volume enhancing tricks... Suddenly you've learned so many of these tricks, you decide to add some of that sweet re-circulation to get that nice clear wort going into the boil... It works! DIY rocks! Then that kit you bought breaks, so you decide to build your own finally, possibly using the little 33 litre stock pot you TRIED to brew with on the stove when you first started out (only to find you couldn't get a rolling boil....). Then you end up wishing you'd bought a bigger one, cus now you have to persuade your wife to let you buy a larger one, and a more powerful element, oh and a new false bottom to fit... Oh yeah, and 2 new taps so you can leave the ones you already have on your 33 litre so you'll have 2 boilers (I haven't mentioned that bit to her yet)....
I think the tl;dr here is probably: go large, brew smaller volumes, or learn how to do volume adjustments. Oh yeah, and welcome to the addiction...
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