
After the boil is over
After the boil is over
I have noticed while reading Jims Brewing Techniques on all grain brewing, after the boil, it says 'Switch off boiler, Let the wort stand for 20-30 minutes'. Is this necessary? What I have being doing was after the boil, cooling straight away with my cooler to get the temp for pitching the yeast 

- Horden Hillbilly
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I let my brews stand for 30 mins after switching off. It allows the hops to settle in the bottom of the boiler before cooling and running off. The hops then act as a filter in a similar way as the grains in the mash tun do when running off. I always draw off a jugful then return it to the boiler as the first runnings can be murky.
- Horden Hillbilly
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They probably would using a immersion wort cooler, I use a CFC myself, hence the wait. This suits me as I usually soak a small amount of hops for 30 mins when I switch my boiler off.PieOPah wrote:Wouldn't the hops settle WHILE cooling?
Last edited by Horden Hillbilly on Tue May 29, 2007 6:43 pm, edited 1 time in total.
i wondered this a while ago , i knew it was to let the hops form a bed but i was using an imersion chiller so thought that they would settle anyway. i tried it with waiting and without and i think to be honest that i got better results by not waiting and going straight into cooling. I think the sudden change helps the cold break, if t cools for half an hour first its not as much as a shock and wont have as much affect. its also a waste of half an hour imo 
