In cold weather months, I bring my brewing indoors. BIAB in an 8 gallon Megapot on the kitchen stove to do 5 gallon batches. Unlike with brewing over propane in the garage, where I have a hoist and pulley (and bigger kettles), in the kitchen I use a 10" strainer atop the Megapot to set the grain bag to drain. This usually creates a mess. With all but the smallest grain bills, the bag does a sort of muffin top effect, flattening out and rolling slightly over the sides, causing wort to run down.
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This is the process I do:
After the sacc rest is complete, I pull tight the drawstring on the bag, lift the bag straight up and place the colander under it, resting the colander on the kettle rim. I set the bag in the colander, tie a prusic loop to cinch up the top of the bag as much possible, to tighten it up. I still need 3 hands to both hold the bag in place to keep it from rolling over the edges while squeezing it. Leaving it sit in the colander to drain by itself will not do, as it does the muffin top thing. I learned the hard away a while back to move the kettle off the stove top before doing mashout. I still get spillage on the counter and floor. Rigging a hoist in my kitchen is not an option, and I usually brew by myself, so nobody to lend a hand.
I've looked online for a larger colander (the Megapot is about 12.5" ID), but nothing looks like it would work. It would be nice to have some kind of conical structure (inverted frustum) made of sheet SS, with mesh attached to the aperture on the bottom and with horizontal bolts or studs protruding from the sides to allow it to sit on kettles of various diameters. If I had a sheet metal shop I'd build one.
Anyone have something better than what I'm doing? Maybe @Bobby_M at Brew Hardware has some ideas? |