Draining mash
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Re: Draining mash
I have a large brewer's funnel with a built in plastic screen. I siphon the upper wash that is mostly clear off first then fill up the funnel with the thicker wash and kind of swish it around with a spatula until I get most of the moisture out of the corn. The problem with this funnel, however, is that the screen is very fine and plugs up quickly. I have to fill and strain many times as well. I tried a strainer that I built out of a larger mesh screen, but it plugged up pretty quickly too. I used a pillow case for years, and it works okay, but the whole process is a pain no matter what I've come up with. I like the two bucket idea with 1/8" holes, and I'm going to try that. What we need is a centrifugal rig - maybe made out of an old washing machine, but there I go dreaming again.
Re: Draining mash
http://www.dudadiesel.com/choose_item.p ... AtPA8P8HAQ" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
- shadylane
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Re: Draining mash
Using a washing machine for a centrifuge has been tried
http://www.artisan-distiller.net/phpBB3 ... ine#p67042" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
http://www.artisan-distiller.net/phpBB3 ... ine#p67042" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
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Re: Draining mash
Good Lord, like minds think alike.
Whiski, what screen size do you recommend?
Whiski, what screen size do you recommend?
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Re: Draining mash
Beekeepers extract honey with a centrifuge, and they are available for the hobbiest...
Re: Draining mash
If you've got about $25K to spare...
- shadylane
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Re: Draining mash
I'd like to build a miniature version of that from my junk pile.
Looks like a good way to separate the wort from the spent grain.
$10 in parts and a couple thousand hours of research and labor should Getter done.
Looks like a good way to separate the wort from the spent grain.
$10 in parts and a couple thousand hours of research and labor should Getter done.
Re: Draining mash
MC you made the sig line.
Steam injection rig http://tinyurl.com/kxmz8hy
All grain corn mash with steam injection and enzymes http://tinyurl.com/mp6zdt5
Inner tube condenser http://tinyurl.com/zkp3ps6
All grain corn mash with steam injection and enzymes http://tinyurl.com/mp6zdt5
Inner tube condenser http://tinyurl.com/zkp3ps6
Re: Draining mash
400-600 Micron.....what screen size do you recommend?
You don't have to handle your bag then..........

Last edited by WIski on Wed Feb 18, 2015 10:29 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Draining mash
Heavy duty salad spinner!
http://www.webstaurantstore.com/5-gallo ... aQodJawAuw" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow

- hawgwrench
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Re: Draining mash
I just make a bigger ferment, rack off the liquid and dump the rest of the mess for the woodland critters to get drunk on.[/quote]
Yep yep! I got a whole herd of deer hangin around....and a right smart of squirrels to boot. They're my greatest fans....
Yep yep! I got a whole herd of deer hangin around....and a right smart of squirrels to boot. They're my greatest fans....

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- S-Cackalacky
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Re: Draining mash
Great find! It's a little pricey for me, but with all the pictures, I could probably build my own on the cheap.One Sock wrote:Heavy duty salad spinner!http://www.webstaurantstore.com/5-gallo ... aQodJawAuw" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
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- Rumrunner
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Re: Draining mash
Ass press... He said Ass...MichiganCornhusker wrote:I was just happy to see that OBX used the ass-press as well, I felt a little foolish thinking I was the only one....
I've had luck with the ass press. Works great using a milk crate to stack your paint stainer bags into until you get a big pile then rest up a bit sitting down on the milk crate. I just place my milk crate on top of the bucket. FYI, put a piece of ply wood over the bags or your ass will get wet... Heh.. I said Ass. I'm sure a mop bucket works better. Then again, so does an apple press. We use what we gots.
Re: Draining mash
The salad spinner looks to have some pretty wide groves. Would a mesh liner be needed? Are you running one of these sock?
- MichiganCornhusker
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Re: Draining mash
An honor and a privilege. I'm touched.Brutal wrote:MC you made the sig line.
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Last edited by MichiganCornhusker on Wed Feb 18, 2015 4:55 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Draining mash
I had an opossum wobbling around one afternoon. Couldn't shoo him off of the sweet feed pile for anything! He just wobbled around a bit and munched more. Looked at me all confused when I was laughing at him to go on. I just let him be. Should see the squirrels with the strawberries from panty dropper!hawgwrench wrote: Yep yep! I got a whole herd of deer hangin around....and a right smart of squirrels to boot. They're my greatest fans....

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Re: Draining mash
when i die, i wanna come back as a squirrel. in your yard.Hound Dog wrote:I had an opossum wobbling around one afternoon. Couldn't shoo him off of the sweet feed pile for anything! He just wobbled around a bit and munched more. Looked at me all confused when I was laughing at him to go on. I just let him be. Should see the squirrels with the strawberries from panty dropper!hawgwrench wrote: Yep yep! I got a whole herd of deer hangin around....and a right smart of squirrels to boot. They're my greatest fans....
I finally quit drinking for good.
now i drink for evil.
now i drink for evil.
Re: Draining mash
Nah, I don't have one, just the talk about centrifuges made me think "salad spinner" so I looked to see if there were bigger ones and found this!WIski wrote:The salad spinner looks to have some pretty wide groves. Would a mesh liner be needed? Are you running one of these sock?

Re: Draining mash
Anyone ever try using one of those drill pumps? The kind that hooks directly to your drill with a piece of tubing (5/8) and a piece of window screen over the inlet? I'm just attempting to determine the best way to do this on my 55 gal fermenter set up
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Re: Draining mash
Those drill pumps are full of grease. You need a mag drive pump but even then the solids will block it up.
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Re: Draining mash
Looked up the mag drive pumps. I would still need to be able to do some type of filtration before the pump. I did my first 5 gal batch of sweetfeed whiskey last nigh (to make sure I could get it right) and my oh my they were a lot of solids that even my siphon picked up. I couldn't even begin to think about "dewatering" the settled grain. Just brainstorming here, but I I'm trying to come up with a good solution for filtering the 55 gal fermenter. I can't just lift it up and dump it into an ass press or mop bucket.
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Re: Draining mash
Have your fermenter raised above standard bucket level. Use a screen type filter or false bottom on a bottom drain and voila. You can also put a jury rigged filter on the end of a racking cane, I know this doesn't get any below your siphon level but...
Check out "bazooka screens"
Another option is a gusher pump, inexpensive and can handle solids. I'm talking the manual pumps
Check out "bazooka screens"
Another option is a gusher pump, inexpensive and can handle solids. I'm talking the manual pumps
New Distiller's Reading http://homedistiller.org/forum/viewforum.php?f=46
Novice Guide to Cuts http://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtopi ... 40&start=0
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Re: Draining mash
I do this too. I also sparge while the grain is in the mop strainer, with 1/2 L of boiling water, and then wring. Living in a high rise, I simply toss the squeezed bag of grain into a bucket and repeat until the all the grain is in the paint strainer bags, then tote them over to guest bathroom toilet, and upend them into the bowl, and flush them away.corene1 wrote:I love my mop wringer and paint strainer bags. Just did a 10 gallon mash in about 30 minuets and lost less than a gallon to the grain. I will run it in the morning.
After a few cycles of this, I've gotten so I can do it about as fast as Corene, and rarely have any cleanup beyond rinsing the mop ringer, the buckets and the bags.
Usually about 15 minutes, start to finish.
If i start with 10 gallons of water in my mash, I usually end up with about 10 gallon of beer, guess the boiling sparge water makes up for what the grain refuses to give back. I can either distill the beer right away, or let it set a couple days to clear. The liquor tastes better if I distill the cloudy beer I think, but if it clears before I get to it, it's easier to clean the still after.
But I'm just an ol Cowboy trapped in the city...so easier is better...
Boom
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Re: Draining mash
Was looking up the false bottoms. I can order the sheet and make my own for about $100. Likely that will be the way I end up going as it seems to be the least amount of maintenance required. Bazooka screens are a good idea, and may be a back up option or I could use in conjunction with false bottom if i could find finer filtration level bazooka screen.bellybuster wrote:Have your fermenter raised above standard bucket level. Use a screen type filter or false bottom on a bottom drain and voila. You can also put a jury rigged filter on the end of a racking cane, I know this doesn't get any below your siphon level but...
Check out "bazooka screens"
Another option is a gusher pump, inexpensive and can handle solids. I'm talking the manual pumps
Thanks for your help. It's nice to bounce ideas of the community members!
Re: Draining mash
You mean like this? I've never seen one of these. If that rubber doesn't have a strong smell this could be pretty useful.bellybuster wrote:Another option is a gusher pump, inexpensive and can handle solids. I'm talking the manual pumps

Steam injection rig http://tinyurl.com/kxmz8hy
All grain corn mash with steam injection and enzymes http://tinyurl.com/mp6zdt5
Inner tube condenser http://tinyurl.com/zkp3ps6
All grain corn mash with steam injection and enzymes http://tinyurl.com/mp6zdt5
Inner tube condenser http://tinyurl.com/zkp3ps6
- S-Cackalacky
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Re: Draining mash
This is going a little off the original topic, but when I siphon something like a SF wash, I have my siphon hose tied to a wooden stick with the end of the hose high enough to be off the grain bed. It usually will also suck up some grain kernels, so I use a ss funnel with a small piece of ss scrubbie stuffed in the spout to strain the wash through and remove any stray grain kernels.
Back on topic - I'm giving some thought to making a centrifuge similar to the salad spinner in the link above. I'll probably use a couple of 5 gallon food grade HDPE buckets and some PVC pipe. The outer bucket would have a piece of smaller PVC securely attached to the bottom of the bucket coming up through the center. The inner bucket would have a larger piece of PVC pipe secured to its lid that would fit over the smaller PVC pipe. This would provide a pivot for the inner bucket to spin on. The lid could have a crank type handle or a pulley with a belt and electric motor. It might need some sort of bearing at the bottom to allow it to spin freely, or just allow the top end of the larger pipe to rest on the top end of the inner pipe. I was thinking of something like a plastic lazy susan or similar. A plastic spigot at the bottom of the outer bucket and holes drilled in the inner bucket should finish it off.
It will be inexpensive to build, so really not much to lose if it turns into a complete failure. I may even already have most of the materials.
Posted while others were posting.
Back on topic - I'm giving some thought to making a centrifuge similar to the salad spinner in the link above. I'll probably use a couple of 5 gallon food grade HDPE buckets and some PVC pipe. The outer bucket would have a piece of smaller PVC securely attached to the bottom of the bucket coming up through the center. The inner bucket would have a larger piece of PVC pipe secured to its lid that would fit over the smaller PVC pipe. This would provide a pivot for the inner bucket to spin on. The lid could have a crank type handle or a pulley with a belt and electric motor. It might need some sort of bearing at the bottom to allow it to spin freely, or just allow the top end of the larger pipe to rest on the top end of the inner pipe. I was thinking of something like a plastic lazy susan or similar. A plastic spigot at the bottom of the outer bucket and holes drilled in the inner bucket should finish it off.
It will be inexpensive to build, so really not much to lose if it turns into a complete failure. I may even already have most of the materials.
Posted while others were posting.
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- cuddy-boozer
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Re: Draining mash
+1 for the false bottom idea on such a large fermentation drum
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Re: Draining mash
bad pic I know but.....
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- cuddy-boozer
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Re: Draining mash
I like that. So rather than relying on gravity to push the wash through a false bottom you're drawing it through by pulling a slight vacuum
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Re: Draining mash
not really, its a mag drive pump so really has little draw, the liquid needs to be available for it to move it.
If I had my time back I would have the drain in the bottom of the tun
If I had my time back I would have the drain in the bottom of the tun
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