TB,
thanks for clearing that up.
I BIAB and always do a mash-out by turning the element in my 40 litre urn back on.
I then stir once or twice not to burn anything during the 15 min it takes to get to 76-78 degrees, then cover it again and leave for 15 mins.
( I have a steel colander over the element)
I wasn't aware of that I should stir while heating, but will do that from now on.
Is it right to then leave it at the mash-out temp for 15 mins before removing the bag or can I remove it straight away when hitting this temp?
(I also sparge by placing the grain bag in a small 15 litre fermenter and folding the bag out over the fermenter top. Then heating water in the tea kettle to 76-78 degrees and pouring this water over the grains. I do 3-4 tea kettles this way, draining wort from the fermenter tap and pouring into the urn before starting the boil. This way I get a bit more volume and gravity points in the kettle and stop sparging well before the wort gravity hits 1.010)
thanks
Bjorn
If you don't stir constantly, then yes, I would let it rest for a little while (but then again I would
never not stir constantly while adding direct heat) - But if you stir while you are heating the mash - then I don't think you need to worry about resting it at the end - just pull the bag. I don't even turn off the heat and pause... just gather up the bag and yoink... now you are raising your kettle wort to the boil.
If you insist on sparging - then as far as I am concerned, just pouring the water over the grain... qualifies as the "easiest" way to do it.. & has no other merit. If pouring a stream of water onto a pile of grain was an effective way to sparge... then a hell of a lot of people have wasted a hell of a lot of time designing complicated expensive mash tuns, lauter tuns and mash filters. Its not. Oh it'll rinse
some sugar out.. but if you are going to do it, do it properly.
Get your grains
submerged in sparge water, use a decent
amount of sparge water (
more than 1L pr kg of grist), stir the bloody stuff to release the sugars and dissolve them in the liquid. Use the fact that you have a bag to your
advantage, rather than using the bag as a poor substitute for a false bottom.
Or just don't sparge at all - there simply is no need to sparge a BIAB in most cases.
Will all your water and grain fit in the pot?? If your answer to that is no... then fair enough, a separate sparge is a solution to the problem -- but if your answer is yes - then why? Why are you doing it? What is it that's making you go to the extra effort and trouble? Presumably you were attracted to BIAB in the first place because it
didn't involve lots of different steps, and multiple bits of equipment - why would you then, without need, add back the very things who's lack is what makes BIAB sensible and attractive?
It's never made very much sense to me
Edit: This rant is somewhat out of place in this thread. In Nick's stovetop method, especially where you might be brewing at higher gravity - sparging probably
is necessary. But if you have moved on to full size BIAB brewing off the stove - the ball game changes significantly.