I realized this morning that the grain for today’s brew had been sitting in my garage below 50F. I moved it into a small bathroom that stays pretty warm with the door closed. After 4 hours, who thinks it warmed up enough to not have to adjust my mash-in temps? I think I’m good but it’s worth hearing from the forum.
I suppose it depends on the volume and the thickness of the mass of grain.
The center may be pretty well insulated.
Can you get an instant read thermometer into the center of the mass?
I shook the bag a few times throughout the day. Looks like it worked out. My usual strike temp got me to within 1 degree of where I wanted to be. I’m cool with that.
I adjust strike water temp higher if grain and are kettles cold.
There is way to calculate grain and equipment temperature in most brewing programs if you need to. I know there is in the old Beersmith program I used to use, probably also in Brewer's Friend.
Nowdays I just raise strike temp by 3-5 degrees, depending on how cold it is.
I would have advised to just mash it in cold (whatever temp the grain was), turn on the heat and bring it up to your desired mash temp. I am betting that if you had a strike water temp of say 160f, you could have heated it up pretty quick after the temperature drop from the cold grain.
I have been keeping some of my malts in the refrigerator which is roughly 41°F. By the time I get them milled with the other time it takes to get ready for mashing, they are almost always about room temp. The milling process itself generates some heat in the malts.
If 3g strike water weighs about 26# - if your grain bill is 13#, +1 degree strike water would give you +2 degrees mash. (mass water / mass grain). So heating the 50 F degree grain to 150 F mash would need 3 g of 200 F strike water. Your calculations will vary.