PistolPatch
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- 29/11/05
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Deary me! Lol!
If it's okay with you guys, I'd prefer this thread be focussed on the podcast which was about explaining things full-volume brewing has enabled us to learn. The single vessel, full-volume brewing method enables a real clarity of things that I think we are losing here in this thread.
[As for who invented BIAB, there is already this thread of 104 posts. This post and the two afterwards are the critical reads, I think. In that thread we already determined that the significance of BIAB was it's full-volume/hidden sparge mashing method and S.E. you agreed there so I'm a little surprised at some of the posts above. That thread though is the best one for whoever wants to spend time on that subject.]
I think the main goal of a thread like this should be to transmit the information in the podcast. Here's an excerpt of an email that James Spencer received after the podcast, "Just listened to the Podcast with the Canook and the Aussie. Best episode ever. I laughed, I learned, I smiled, and I learned again."
The podcast is really all about discovering new paradigms and identifying some large elephants in the room. There are many of them but I'll name just three here.
1. Most published recipes on the internet are meaningless. See here .
2. Commonly used terminology amongst homebrewers has also become meaningless. 'Batch Size', 'Efficiency' etc now mean nothing. See here.
3. 'Kettle Efficiency' and it's extremely poor cousin, "Fermentor Efficiency" (which most software is based on) is a variable. So, when anyone says, "I always get x% efficiency", it's a good sign that more education is needed and it is an education that is sorely lacking. The main reason is because brewing software to date has been built from the wrong premise - it leads you to believe that efficiency (kettle or fermentor) and trub losses are a constant.
...
I asked stux a few years ago to investigate how kettle efficiency (forget ambiguous terms like 'brewhouse', 'mash' or 'whatever' efficiency as they mean nothing now) varied depending on certain factors. He would have spent a hundred hours (probably many-fold more) exploring that and I would have spent the same again, thinking on and simplifying the formula.
Finding the elephants and creating solutions are most important Aussie inventions/discoveries that did take thousands of hours. (There's many Aussies that helped - chiller is yet another example.) Having software intelligently work out your kettle efficiency, evaporation, fermentor efficiency, kettle to fermentor loss and fermentor to packaging loss is revolutionary - no other software can do anything the BIABacus can do and it can work for extract and three vessel brewers as well.
I'll need another week or two to get the BIABacus out as an official release. It can be easily laughed at as it is only a spreadsheet (free of charge, mind you). But it is a game-changer.
I'm just hoping that AHB's most respected posters will take some time to pass on the 3 rogue elephants we have outlined above and the ones here as well as the 90 minute mash thing.
In other words, I hope this thread becomes more about passing on high quality information and education. I'll certainly spend time answering those questions if people have listened to the podcast.
I better go!
PP
P.S. Crusty - good on you. A very old PM is probably is still in your other box. Bribie, your post on the 90 minute thing was excellent! I'll email you re that because open-mindedness like that is just brilliant :super: .
If it's okay with you guys, I'd prefer this thread be focussed on the podcast which was about explaining things full-volume brewing has enabled us to learn. The single vessel, full-volume brewing method enables a real clarity of things that I think we are losing here in this thread.
[As for who invented BIAB, there is already this thread of 104 posts. This post and the two afterwards are the critical reads, I think. In that thread we already determined that the significance of BIAB was it's full-volume/hidden sparge mashing method and S.E. you agreed there so I'm a little surprised at some of the posts above. That thread though is the best one for whoever wants to spend time on that subject.]
I think the main goal of a thread like this should be to transmit the information in the podcast. Here's an excerpt of an email that James Spencer received after the podcast, "Just listened to the Podcast with the Canook and the Aussie. Best episode ever. I laughed, I learned, I smiled, and I learned again."
The podcast is really all about discovering new paradigms and identifying some large elephants in the room. There are many of them but I'll name just three here.
1. Most published recipes on the internet are meaningless. See here .
2. Commonly used terminology amongst homebrewers has also become meaningless. 'Batch Size', 'Efficiency' etc now mean nothing. See here.
3. 'Kettle Efficiency' and it's extremely poor cousin, "Fermentor Efficiency" (which most software is based on) is a variable. So, when anyone says, "I always get x% efficiency", it's a good sign that more education is needed and it is an education that is sorely lacking. The main reason is because brewing software to date has been built from the wrong premise - it leads you to believe that efficiency (kettle or fermentor) and trub losses are a constant.
...
I asked stux a few years ago to investigate how kettle efficiency (forget ambiguous terms like 'brewhouse', 'mash' or 'whatever' efficiency as they mean nothing now) varied depending on certain factors. He would have spent a hundred hours (probably many-fold more) exploring that and I would have spent the same again, thinking on and simplifying the formula.
Finding the elephants and creating solutions are most important Aussie inventions/discoveries that did take thousands of hours. (There's many Aussies that helped - chiller is yet another example.) Having software intelligently work out your kettle efficiency, evaporation, fermentor efficiency, kettle to fermentor loss and fermentor to packaging loss is revolutionary - no other software can do anything the BIABacus can do and it can work for extract and three vessel brewers as well.
I'll need another week or two to get the BIABacus out as an official release. It can be easily laughed at as it is only a spreadsheet (free of charge, mind you). But it is a game-changer.
I'm just hoping that AHB's most respected posters will take some time to pass on the 3 rogue elephants we have outlined above and the ones here as well as the 90 minute mash thing.
In other words, I hope this thread becomes more about passing on high quality information and education. I'll certainly spend time answering those questions if people have listened to the podcast.
I better go!
PP
P.S. Crusty - good on you. A very old PM is probably is still in your other box. Bribie, your post on the 90 minute thing was excellent! I'll email you re that because open-mindedness like that is just brilliant :super: .