I find the convenience far out weighs the loss of gravity points, I've long since given up chasing efficiency points.
Cheers Ross
Ha! We are finally in agreement Rosscoe
! That is the most important point. Arguing about efficiency detracts the new brewer from what they should be chasing which is simply two things - a great recipe and a great brewing method. Efficiency is a bullshit argument. Whilst I maintain that BIAB is very efficient, I would much prefer readers here looking for great recipes.
Ross, in those pioneering days when I had made a hundred posts here and rang you and asked if you thought BIAB could work and you said, "I can't see any reason why not," I really appreciated it. You even said I could try it with a pillow slip but then had the far better suggestion of using polyester curtain material. Thank God I didn't try the former
.
What the new brewer should realise is that regardless of how right you or I think we are, (you think 3 vessel brewing always gives you a better quality beer whilst I think BIAB will, in most cases, actually give you a better quality beer,) a great all-grain recipe will
always give you a great beer. Your Schwartzbier recipe, the first all-grain I ever brewed, is a fine example of this.
You can brew that beer with lager or ale yeast. You can stuff your mash temps up. You can even brew a low alcohol version of it as I did several times (don't know of anyone else who did that???) and still get an outstanding beer. That recipe is a robust recipe and one that I still brew today with only minor adjustments. You should be proud of that. The fact that I was the first to brew it with an ale yeast (US-56) is a testament to you providing me with a recipe that we now know actually tastes a tad better when brewed with the ale yeast. Recipes are the key to great all-grain.
We can argue all day about technicalities but a great recipe should be the Holy Grail of all brewers. This is the message we should be spreading and you Ross, should be proud that your Schwartzbier recipe (with slight variations) has a permanent place amongst my 8 taps. Regardless of how badly I sometimes brew it, it is always well received.
Anyone who bags the science of BIAB has a lot to refute. It is at minimum, a great brewing method. I actually think it is a better brewing method than batch or fly sparging for obvious reasons unless your sole concern is efficiency in which case, fly-sparging will win. If your primary aim is to make great beer for $9 a carton rather than $10 a carton then by all means, let's argue about efficiency until the cows come home!!!!
I'd prefer, in this thread, that we talk about great recipes such as your Scwartz, Ross or the ways in which BIAB offers superior control over mash temperature and efficiency than non-pumped traditional does.
[To Be Continued: AHB word count has jumped in. Continued a few posts below...]