IainMcLean
Well-Known Member
Anyone have any input on this notion:
You have kids/busy weekend/lack of time so you do your mash one evening, mash out and collect the wort into the kettle before covering it with the lid. You wrap the kettle to insulate it and then go to bed. In the morning you start the boil.
Works out at 2 hours one night, 3 hours the next morning for a brew.
Heard it on Basic Brewing Radio. Interesting idea - the guys discuss that apparently little heat is lost due to thermal mass, enzyme activity and the possibility of infection - saying that as the wort is going to be boiled that any wild yeasts that may bet in there will be killed anyway.
Here's the Basic Brewing Radio linky:
http://hw.libsyn.com/p/f/c/5/fc5841eca6229...9d40d0695f0c53a
Edit: the topic is about 1/4 of the way into the show....
You have kids/busy weekend/lack of time so you do your mash one evening, mash out and collect the wort into the kettle before covering it with the lid. You wrap the kettle to insulate it and then go to bed. In the morning you start the boil.
Works out at 2 hours one night, 3 hours the next morning for a brew.
Heard it on Basic Brewing Radio. Interesting idea - the guys discuss that apparently little heat is lost due to thermal mass, enzyme activity and the possibility of infection - saying that as the wort is going to be boiled that any wild yeasts that may bet in there will be killed anyway.
Here's the Basic Brewing Radio linky:
http://hw.libsyn.com/p/f/c/5/fc5841eca6229...9d40d0695f0c53a
Edit: the topic is about 1/4 of the way into the show....