Thanks for the reply.
I have read Palmers online book, but I'm still not sure about the process.
So, I drain off the wort after 60 minutes, then add more hot water? How much and for how long do I let it stand?
Ok, in addition to all the useful info (esp. the article that Pat wrote) you need to understand why you're doing what you're doing...
//Apologies in advance if this appears all too simple or I'm teaching you to suck eggs!\\
First of all, you need to crack the grain you want to make the wort (unfermented beer). Get the homebrew shop you bought the grains from to do it if you don't have a mill.
Once the grains are cracked, you add them to the mashtun that has approx. 2.3L per kilo of grain in the mashtun (and make the water at least 10 degrees hotter than the target mash temp otherwise the cool grains will make your mash temp fall short - keep some boiling water handy to push up the temp if necessary).
The mash is like a loose porridge - you need to add water to the crushed grains so the crushed starch particles get converted, by some enzymes in the grain, to sugar. It's this sugar that the yeast eats to give you alcohol and CO2 as byproducts. The starch and enzymes are key elements of malted grains.
After a 1 hour soak (mash), you need to remove the mash water and then add some more water by either slowly drizzling water onto the grain bed (fly sparging) or adding a volume of water, stirring, and then emptying again (Batch Sparging). You won't get a lot out of the mashtun to begin with since a kilo of grains will soak up roughly 1 litre of water but you need to get the liqour out of the mashtun and into the kettle to boil it.
A good recipe program will work out your water calcs but essentially you need to stop sparging if your mash liquor drops below 1.010 gravity otherwise you risk extracting harsh tannins.
Once you've finished sparging the mash grains, you will have a sweet wort liquor that needs to be boiled so you can bitter and flavour the malt extract with hops. Boil for an hour and add hops at particular intervals to add bittering, flavour and aroma profiles to suit your needs or the style of beer you're making.
Cool after the boil, transfer from the kettle to a fermenter, pitch yeast and seal.
That's it in a nutshell, Palmer's book provides more detail on those steps.
Cheers,
TL