How do you chill your wort?
How do you chill your wort?
How are most of you chilling your wort? I have tried several methods. First a 25 foot 3/8" copper tubing immersion chiller made by Larry. It didn't chill our 10 gallon batches very fast. Worked great for 5 gallons. I built a counter flow chiller with a garden hose and 25' of 3/8" copper tubing. It worked pretty well. I borrowed David Ard's Therminator plate chiller and pump. It chilled like the counterflow but faster. I recently purchased a large immersion chiller with a whirlpool return like developed by Jamil Zainasheff (Mr. Malty). He said he prefers this method to all the plate chillers. I will let you know how I like it. It is supposed to help retain hop flavor and aroma while reducing DMS due to the cooling of the entire volume of wort below 140 F in a matter of minutes. With my counterflow chiller or a plate chiller, the entire worts sits near 200 degrees until it passes through the chiller. No problem as long as it goes through fast. I will let you now how my new chiller works once I brew with it.
Matt Franklin
Slappy Brewing North
On Tap:
American IPA
Strata Hazy IPA
Dr. Lee Orval
American Strong Ale
Friend of the Devil Belgian Golden Strong
Imperial Stout
Slappy Brewing North
On Tap:
American IPA
Strata Hazy IPA
Dr. Lee Orval
American Strong Ale
Friend of the Devil Belgian Golden Strong
Imperial Stout
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- Posts: 1236
- Joined: Mon Feb 06, 2006 11:10 am
- Location: Cedar Rapids, IA
Brando, do you do partial boils or full boils?
Brownbeard, what kind of utility pump do you use? Is it like a sump pump? I wouldn't mind trying that some day.
Brownbeard, what kind of utility pump do you use? Is it like a sump pump? I wouldn't mind trying that some day.
Matt Franklin
Slappy Brewing North
On Tap:
American IPA
Strata Hazy IPA
Dr. Lee Orval
American Strong Ale
Friend of the Devil Belgian Golden Strong
Imperial Stout
Slappy Brewing North
On Tap:
American IPA
Strata Hazy IPA
Dr. Lee Orval
American Strong Ale
Friend of the Devil Belgian Golden Strong
Imperial Stout
I use an immersion chiller I built out of copper tubing. It works well as long as I stir the wort periodically. Jamil's approach is basically the same thing w/ a fancy wort-stirrer. After it's cool, I remove the chiller and give it a good stir to whirlpool, while I go sanitize my fermenter, siphon starter, tubing, etc. I'm doing 5 gallon batches.
-Tom
-Tom
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- Posts: 1236
- Joined: Mon Feb 06, 2006 11:10 am
- Location: Cedar Rapids, IA
I do a counterflow chiller made from a garden hose and 5/16 tubing. I got the tubing free, that's why not 3/8. The 5/16 flows slow, 25 min. for each 5 gallon. I'm going to get a march pump this spring and force the beer through.
I usaully brew outside at home and run the hose through the counterflow to the sprinkler hoses for the landscaping. This winter brewing inside I used a sump pump and icewater. I filled my HWT and run out of that. It worked OK, but used a lot of ice.
I don't do overly hoppy beers so I'm not as concerned with the speed of the chill.
I usaully brew outside at home and run the hose through the counterflow to the sprinkler hoses for the landscaping. This winter brewing inside I used a sump pump and icewater. I filled my HWT and run out of that. It worked OK, but used a lot of ice.
I don't do overly hoppy beers so I'm not as concerned with the speed of the chill.
Runamok Brewing
Jesus must have been a yeast. Who else could turn water into wine?
Jesus must have been a yeast. Who else could turn water into wine?
I have the standard 3/8" copper tubing immersion chiller. I normally go outside on the deck (even in winter) and use the garden hose to supply the water. I can normally get a 2 gal boil down under 90F in about 10 minutes, even in summer.
Best results to date (fastest chill to pitching temp) was this winter's Pilsen. I put the glass carboy on the deck with the 3 gals of water in it while I brewed. It got down to about 40F and was starting to frost up on the inside by the time I finished the boil. When I put the 85F wort in after chilling with the immersion, the whole 5 gals was under 60F, perfect for the lager yeast I was using. As much as I hate Winter, it's great for making beer!!
Best results to date (fastest chill to pitching temp) was this winter's Pilsen. I put the glass carboy on the deck with the 3 gals of water in it while I brewed. It got down to about 40F and was starting to frost up on the inside by the time I finished the boil. When I put the 85F wort in after chilling with the immersion, the whole 5 gals was under 60F, perfect for the lager yeast I was using. As much as I hate Winter, it's great for making beer!!
A Mighty Wind's A Brewing
“Life is short - break the rules, forgive quickly, kiss slowly, love truly, laugh uncontrollably, and never regret anything that made you smile” ― Mae West
“Life is short - break the rules, forgive quickly, kiss slowly, love truly, laugh uncontrollably, and never regret anything that made you smile” ― Mae West
I use the Chillzilla counterflow chiller that I got from Northernbrewer.
What I do like is that I don't have to put it directly in the wort.
Which makes the following possible.
One thing I did with this that helps is I modified a bucket that I can put the chiller in. Cut some holes in the side of the bucket for the connections to protrude from. Sanitize and place the chiller in the bucket 15 minutes before chilling wort and fill with ice. Stuff came out so chilled that I had to let it warm up a bit before pitching. However, that was when I was gravity feeding the system. Now I use a pump and it comes out just right.
What I do like is that I don't have to put it directly in the wort.
Which makes the following possible.
One thing I did with this that helps is I modified a bucket that I can put the chiller in. Cut some holes in the side of the bucket for the connections to protrude from. Sanitize and place the chiller in the bucket 15 minutes before chilling wort and fill with ice. Stuff came out so chilled that I had to let it warm up a bit before pitching. However, that was when I was gravity feeding the system. Now I use a pump and it comes out just right.