you mean at 90 degrees??any issues going straight from kettle into white plastic fermenter?
Nope, as long as it's HDPE be it clip on lid bucket fermenter or screw on lid barrel type it's tolerant of 100 deg's, it's what hot cubing is all about.any issues going straight from kettle into white plastic fermenter?
hope you're doing all this on the deck, with a proper bucketWhite could be a problem though
Don't forget the bucket, you don't want to go getting stuff everywherehope you're doing all this on the deck, with a proper bucket
We have had this conversation several times before Mark and still seem to be going around in circles. As I have explained before BIAB as you know it was known and used way before Braumeisters at least outside Australia. I find it hard to believe that it was unheard of in AU though perhaps just not as common as homebrewing seems to have taken off a lot later here than Europe and elsewhere?I think you have mixed a lot of home brewing history into a bit of a mishmash that isn't very historically accurate.
My recollection of the early writings on All Grain brewing involved what people today call 3V systems, things like Bruheat and 1V brewing came along a bit later, BIAB as we know it in response to systems like Baumeisters, then it all went crazy.
Immersion chillers or putting the kettle (stock pot) into a tub of cold water was the norm until the 2000's.
What ever you want to do and however you want to make beer, look at the processes, try the well tested and proven first, learn what the various steps in brewing do, then maybe look for ways to improve your processes.
After you know what the steps in the process are for and the effect mucking around with them will have on your beer, is a better time to reinvent the process.
Mark
Last time we had this conversation I went and looked at all the old home brewing books I could find (some back to the 1950's) what I have posted is what is reported in those references. Most of these are English books.We have had this conversation several times before Mark and still seem to be going around in circles. As I have explained before BIAB as you know it was known and used way before Braumeisters at least outside Australia. I find it hard to believe that it was unheard of in AU though perhaps just not as common as homebrewing seems to have taken off a lot later here than Europe and elsewhere?
What I wrote above is my recollection of homebrewing and the equiptment used from when I first took an interest and started brewing in 1979.
The first time I personally saw a BIAB system (as it is now called) was about a couple years prior to that in Ireland. I moved back to the UK in about 1981 lived with an uncle and helped him brew but didn’t really start brewing in earnest myself until several years later.
My memory of exactly when I bought my own BIAB system is a bit hazy but I think would have been late eighties when I went to the LHBS and bought a Bruheat boiler (think my first one was actually an Electrim Bin boiler but same as Bruheat) a grain bag and fermenter. Also bought a keg system, plastic keg and co2 bottle.
The homebrew books I read at that time did sometimes show grain bags used in a separate mashtun but leaned towards 1v brewing using just the Bruheat and grain bag and that’s what I did. The bag was hoisted above the Bruheat and supported between two chairs with broom handles through the bag handles. I was living and brewing in a single room bedsit at that time and only had a shower so had to wait till next day to pitch yeast. After I moved to a house with a bath tub I used that filled with cold water to cool the wort.
Not sure why your recollections of early writings on all grain brewing only involved 3V systems but I am guessing you may have started reading and brewing a lot later when 3v systems were the norm and popular on mostly American chat rooms? I remember first seeing these on the interweb around 1994-95.
I would also hazard a guess that there were not many homebrew books in Australia prior to 1974 when I think homebrewing was made legal here? The UK had a head start with modern homebrewing as it was made legal to brew again without a license 1963.
Another reason why home brewing with simple equipment took off earlier in the UK than AU may be that it is easier to brew there most of the year so an easier hobby to take up. With the cooler climate you mostly need to keep the fermenter warm which is easier with a heat mat or belt than cooling in a temp controlled fridge.
When did temp controls like FridgeMate or STC1000 become available?
I also found kegging easier in the UK than here as near cellar temp was easy to achieve just leaving the keg in a garage or cool room in the house. That’s not quite as easy these days though as most houses have central heating radiators in every room.
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