| All-grain brewing: How to batch sparge |
| Written by DJ Spiess | ||
| Sunday, 24 February 2008 | ||
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There are several methods for all-grain homebrewing, but few are as simple and cheap as batch sparging. If you want to start all-grain brewing, this is the easiest way to start! Sparging is sprinkling water over mash to rinse the fermentable sugars from the grain. The rinsing helps to extract about 70-80% of the fermentable sugars from the grain. These sugars eventually become your alcohol and beer. There are two common methods to sparge your grains: continuous sparge, and batch sparging. ![]() The magical batch sparging mash tun! Continuous (or Fly) spargingContinuous (or Fly) sparging is the most popular, and this method is similar to how the big breweries sparge. Many homebrewers use this method as well. A sprinkler is positioned over the mash, and water is trickled over the grains to drain the sugars. The rate of liquid drained is equal to the amount of water added to the grain. This trickling of water “rinses” the grains and uses the grain bed as a filter to keep back any solids. Fly sparging usually requires some specialized equipment, but you can build your own system. Continuous sparging usually results in 70-80% efficiency if done correctly. Batch spargingBatch sparging is a method that was popularized by Denny Conn (he calls it the “Cheap ‘n’ Easy” batch sparge brewing ). This method is not really sparging, since batch sparging removes the sugars from the grain through diffusion. The grain is not “rinsed”. The coolerTo batch sparge, you need a cooler converted into a mash tun. The cooler is “converted” to include a drain and a filter. The cooler is nothing more than your average beverage cooler. I use a Coleman Extreme cooler because it holds the temperature much longer. This is great if you want to mash overnight and split your brew time into two days. ![]() The drain inside the cooler is made from a stainless steel braid Red vs. BlueYou might see comments on brewboards arguing between red and blue coolers. This is actually an inside joke, and the color of the cooler has no effect on the batch sparge method. Just find a good 40L cooler (for 5 gallon brews) that can hold a temperature for more than a few days. ![]() This cooler works well because the recess lowers the position of the drain to help get more wort out! StepsBatch sparging has the following steps: calculate your water, mash, infuse with water, drain, sparge with a second infusion, and drain. You can repeat batch sparging, but usually 2 is the magic number. Here are the steps in more detail. 1) Calculate your water additionsYou need to calculate the water for your mash and each sparge. Typically you will only calculate water for your mash, one batch infusion for your first runoff, and one batch infusion for your second runoff. You can have more than one runoff, but two is usually sufficient. The total volume of all runoffs should equal your total pre-boil wort volume. 2) Complete the mash with the first water additionHeat the water calculated for your first runoff a bit higher than your target mash temperature. For example, if your target mash temperature is 150 F, heat the water to 165-170F. Add this water to your cooler, and then add the grain. Adding the water to a cooler filled with grain will create dry clumps and make it more difficult to mash all of your grain. ![]() The mash is set-and-forget! Just don't forget to close the lid. Once your mash is complete, add the first infusion of water. This additional water should be heated to 180-190F in order to get the grain bed temperature to 170F. The higher temperature is to help dissolve any remaining sugars. Wait 10 minutes before progressing to the next step. 3) Drain the mashDrain your wort from the cooler. The first few pints should be recirculated back into the cooler, until the runoff comes out clear. Recirculating the wort over the grain bed is also called vorlauf. Once the runoff is clear of grain particles, drain as much wort from the cooler as you can. While you are draining the first runoff, heat the second batch of water. 4) Add the second water additionThe second addition water should be almost boiling, so that you can get the temperature as close to 170F as possible. I usually try to get the water between 180-190F. Add this water to the emptied grain bed. 5) Drain againThe instructions for this step are the same as step 3. Recirculate the first few pints until it is clear, and then drain as much as you can. Why it works betterBatch sparging is superior to continuous sparging in the following ways: Related Articles
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