I don't see that as a huge time saver.Barge said:2. Buy your grain milled. I get my grain from craftbrewer, pre-milled and vaccum sealed. It saves me time and gives me a window of opportunity to brew. If I'm too tired, etc on one night I can leave it for the next night or whatever.
How long does it take to mill? Time is precious when the kids are younger. My older kids feed and bathe themselves so dinner/bath time is not an issue. It is for my younger 2 though. I have to feed the 18 month old and make sure the 3 y.o. stays at the table. Then I have to bathe/dress/etc both of them.indica86 said:I don't see that as a huge time saver.
I have bulk grain here and mill as I need.
When kids are of school age
I've only had a mill for a few brews but for me its like a 10 min process...Barge said:How long does it take to mill?
5 minutes.Barge said:How long does it take to mill?
Haha my kids are 3 and 18months I recently retired my mountain bike to fund an air conditioner for the family and some brewery upgrades. I had to choose which hobby I could dedicate my limited time with. And mountain bike riding ain't fun when ya on a time limit.indica86 said:5 minutes.
My kids are older though...
I understand the issue, I had the same problems with attempting to ride my MTB when the kids were little.
Sometime you just have to MAKE time.
Barge said:How long does it take to mill? Time is precious when the kids are younger. My older kids feed and bathe themselves so dinner/bath time is not an issue. It is for my younger 2 though. I have to feed the 18 month old and make sure the 3 y.o. stays at the table. Then I have to bathe/dress/etc both of them.
I'm assuming the situation is similar for the OP.
Good idea, I hadn't thought of that. Because I made an electric kettle, and put money into the elements and enclosure and time into wiring it and getting it checked then I'm planning on putting up with it for a while.Markbeer said:Barge if you have a 38l pot just get another and do side by sides. Will take virtually the same time but double the output and 2 different beers.
Late response but to double the output of an urn BIAB brew without buying a second urn, provided that you have the means to heat up a second batch of strike water, you can do a mash in a bag in an esky while the first batch is boiling. When the urn is free, transfer mash in bag and go again. I use a 30 dollar Aldi esky, 40L I think.earle said:I BIAB in a crown urn and chill. I usually set up the night before and put the urn on a timer so that It's ready to mash in around 8 the next day. If I get my act together on that day I can be chilled, into the fermenter and cleaned up by about 12. If you used a timer to do that but got up much earlier and no-chilled you could be finished and cleaned up by around 9 I reckon.
the only issue I see with that is I think mashing is 3 pints and 3 pints in 20 minutes (sure we've all done it) could have a negative impact on my 2 pints for boilingLiam_snorkel said:
I have had to adjust a few recipes due to increased mash efficiency due to going back to sleep for a few hours after doughing in.CmdrRyekr said:Been said, but crush the night before and fill your HLT, stick it on a timer. Ready for mash in early! Jump out of bed, tip in the grain in, stir then back in to make the kids breakfast. Or go back to bed, as I've done a few times.
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