Nobby Novice wrote:I think my next brew will have the other malts steeped in a pan and then the liquor added to the boiler.
This is exactly what I do. I use a 15L stock pot and when I steep the grains, I use an old pasta pan. I don't even use a grain bag. I just fill the pasta pan pretty close to the top with cold water, throw the grain in and turn the hob up pretty high.
While I wait, I usually throw a couple of litres or so of water into my stock pot, dissolve my malt extracts and busy while waiting for my grain to finish steeping.
Once the surface of the grains starts to break up in the pasta pan, and foam emerge, you can be pretty sure the water below is close to boiling.
I then transfer to the main stock pot using a sieve. Yes, people will say it's too much faffing around and it's probably true but it suits me well. I often pour some hot water in (but not boiling) to get some more liquid from the grains.
I then put the sieve on the pasta pan. What remaining liquids filter through normally get added to the stock pot. Once it's all good and boiling, I then add copper hops. The sieve usually gets cleaned and sterilised to wait for the end of the boil to filter out the hops.
Don't give up. Learning is half the fun. The more you try, the better your results will get. I am pretty satisfied with my results though I too continue to learn over time. Fortunately, the more you do it, the easier it gets
Cheers
Jason
Once, during Prohibition, I was forced to live for days on nothing but food and water.
W. C. Fields