Keeping the mash at a certain temp.

Methods, ingredients, advice and equipment specific to all-grain (mash), partial mash (mini mash) and "brew in a bag" (BIAB) brewing.
Post Reply
mark68
Posts: 152
Joined: Saturday Feb 25, 2006 1:35 pm

Keeping the mash at a certain temp.

Post by mark68 »

After seeing a few photographs of people mashing in a plastic esky,how do you control the temp. as there is no heat source apart from boiling a pan full of water and adding this to the mash?It would seem that a variation in temp. of 20 degrees or more over the period of the mash doesn't ruin the brew.Is this correct?
User avatar
gregb
Moderator
Posts: 2620
Joined: Saturday Sep 25, 2004 9:12 am
Location: Sydney

Post by gregb »

Pre heat the esky, it usually holds close enough.

Cheers,
Greg
General
Posts: 216
Joined: Sunday Feb 06, 2005 4:02 pm
Location: Melbourne, VIC

Post by General »

Greg,

I am also interested in this, so are you saying heat the esky with boiling water? or some other heat source?
Jeffro

All I need is a cold beer, a kind word, and unquestioned world domination.
munkey
Posts: 221
Joined: Thursday Jan 20, 2005 4:08 am
Location: united kingdom

Post by munkey »

i have a temp controlled mashing pot and dont use the coolbox type, but i do occasonaly use an infusion method to better control the temps, bacicaly i use the Decoction mashing technique to acheve tempriture additions, this is bacicaly just removing some of the mash and boiling it then adding it back, there is a specific science to calculating the amount needed to be drawn off and heated to acheve your temp adjustment. (there are programes and guids that tell you how).
8) englend victorious "ashes 2005" 8)
User avatar
gregb
Moderator
Posts: 2620
Joined: Saturday Sep 25, 2004 9:12 am
Location: Sydney

Post by gregb »

General,

Spot on, hot water into the esky to warm it up, same as you do when you pre heat a thermos flask.

Cheers,
Greg
Bruiser
Posts: 17
Joined: Thursday Oct 13, 2005 10:59 am
Location: Hornsby, NSW
Contact:

Post by Bruiser »

Mark 68, you should only experience a loss in temperature of a degree or two, not 20 degrees. That's why people use esky's as mash tuns; they're designed to not lose the cool temperature from the ice to keep your beer cold. Put hot wort into it and the insulation keeps most of the heat in.
wee stu
Posts: 7
Joined: Thursday Jan 12, 2006 5:39 pm
Location: Adelaide

Post by wee stu »

Bruiser is right, especially in a full mash brew there is a lot of thermal mass in the grain itself. If you have an esky which loses 20 degrees over the duration of a mash, go and get another esky.

I use a 35l cylindrical Keep Cold brand esky, and with a 60 minute mash and around 5kg of grain, I tend to lose a degree only over the mash period.
"I think I had wan too many"

C & C Reid
yardglass
Posts: 1072
Joined: Sunday Oct 09, 2005 7:40 am
Location: Brewing in the Shed.

Post by yardglass »

same, the mash temp drops 1*C over 60 min.
excuse me... your karma just ran over my dogma.

GOOD BREWS
Post Reply