Denny wrote:brewsters millionths wrote:hey thirsty, does it matter if the grain is exposed to the air when you're about to boil the shit out of it? i batch sparge and i don't stir up the mash between batches as i am using the grain bed as a filter and that would defeat the purpose surely? what am i missing here dude. what am i doing wrong?
If your efficiency is OK, then you don't need to stir. But my experience is that my efficiency sucks if I don't stir. It only takes me a qt. of vorlauf and maybe 2 minutes to reset the grainbed after stirring.
What Denny said. Like I'd disagree with what Denny says about batch sparging anyway
What sort of mash seperation system do you have? I'm using (and Denny too I believe) stainless steel hose braid. The vorlauf happens really fast. I re-circ with a little pump and its ready to go in 30 seconds flat, if you're fussy, take alittle longer and the wort runs basically bright in a couple of minutes.
If you have a false bottom, I heard Graham Sanders talking about how he stirs his mash tun without upsetting his grain bed. He just has a mark on his mash paddle that is level with the top of his mash tun when the tip of the paddle is a couple/few inches from the false bottom. He just doesn't put it in any deeper than the mark. That way he can stir up "most" of mash with out disturbing hte bottom couple of inches where the majority of the filtering action is going on anyway.
Graham is talking about during the main mash, not batch sparging, but it seems like it would work as a compromise between eeking out the highest efficiency you could with a batch sparge, and saving your self a bit of time on a second vorlauf.
As for exposing the grain to the air during the sparge.... This is one of the 5% things I was talking about. If the wort drains out slowly during a batch sparge, then because its not being replaced by water, the minute the liquid level drops below the top, the grain is in the air drying out. The longer it takes to fully drain the tun, the longer its exposed before you put in your next batch of sparge water.
Why is this bad??? Well, I'm frankly not really sure. I assume its got something to do with hot side aeration (lots of surface area) or with tannins or something. I just mainly remember reading about it as a possible reason to not batch sparge. Then again I seem to recall a few people saying that it was bollocks as well. I figure; get the drain over and done with ASAP, and your're better safe than sorry. Also saves time.
Hope that helps
Thirsty
PS. I haven't been doing this very long and only just on Sunday brewed my first AG batch where I hit all my numbers. So if anyone disagreeswith what I'm saying... they're probably right


