Hi, my name is Rich but my friends call me Chard,
After making Elderflower Champagne about 2 years ago and then building a cider press and making homegrown cider i got into brewing my own beer as that is the drink i drink the most!
This started by making up various homebrew kits which come with malt extract and yeast to which you just add water! Simple enough but you're limited to what the producers of the kits make and it can be kind of expensive (about £20 for 40 pints...still cheaper than the pub).
The next step is 'All Grain Brewing'. Here you take crushed malted barley, hops, water and yeast and craft yourself a beer that YOU like and for a lot less than by using kits.
This is the first in a series of 4 Instructables which will document my journey into the world of 'all grain' brewing and how you can build your very own low cost brewery from scratch! Starting with ... the Mash Tun.
Remove these ads by
Signing UpStep 1What the Hell is a Mash Tun?
But enough of that you'll learn about that in my last step in the series - making beer!
The criteria of the mash tun, or MT for short, is to keep a steady temperature for 90mins before draining off the liquid. It has to withstand temperatures around the 80oC mark, be food safe and have a good way to drain of the liquid and leaving all the grain behind.
Buying the most basic prefabricated homebrew mash tun would cost over £65.... my design will be about half that.... so what will you need?
| « Previous Step | Download PDFView All Steps | Next Step » |
















































sorry, i've probably missed something, but you said the water is supposed to be 66ÚC but i don't see how it becomes that hot, unless you heat it up outside the container and pour it in. if so how do you heat up 25 liters of water easily?
nice instructable. I have been thinking about this type of mash-tun when i went to all grain brewing 12 years ago.
I decided against it, because i wanted to be able to do step mashes, without adding hot water.
I was thinking of a slotted false bottom. (Waterjet or Laser-made)
But then i came across this:
schmidling.com/empp.htm
I made some 20'000 liters of beer and ale with it. It works like a blast.
Another important tip, i read in the last Zymurgy.
Spray the malt with some water, mix and let it sit for 5 minutes before milling. (200ml water for 10kg malt)
It makes a huge difference, especially with wheat malt.
The insulation on the mash tun has been replaced since i took the picture....
Cheers Thomas
the easy masher looks pretty damn good aswell but if you fly sparge do you get channeling?
Ive heard that tip for milling aswell, the moisture helps keeps the husks intacts right? I dont mill my own grain as i am only just starting and this is very much a starters brewery. Thanks for the intrest though!
Moist milling indeed keeps the husks intact. You get a looser mash, which makes lautering much easier.(No more slow or stuck mashes during lautering)
Milling the grain yourself is a nice thing. You get better prices on bulk malt and the whole kernels stay fresh much longer. When i started all grain brewing, i invested in a mill from the beginning.
Some photos: milling, our deluxe bottle washer(24 bottles in one go...), sanitizing our wort cooler and finally bottling
maybe the collander and extremely fine cloth would work...maybe something for you to try :)
How does it taste? I just bought some bins for the kitchen recently and the smell of the plastic aint nice.
I'd hate to go through the whole process only to have a plasticy taste.
Especially when you have something of that temperature in it for that length of time.
L
Couple of thoughts for you and your readers.
Most modern malts don't take 90 minutes to achieve full conversion. 60 minutes is typical for most mashes and even then is plenty generous. For the technical minded an iodine test for starch conversion will let you know when conversion is complete.
You can save a bit of money if you take out the valve and substitute a hose barb and a couple feet of tubing. As long as the end of the tubing is above the level of liquid in the mash tun nothing will come out. That said I do have a ball valve on my converted coolbox.
as for the barb idea i personally think youre asking for trouble. if that hose falls then youll end up with a LOT of mess especially if like me you dont plan on being in the same room as your mashing. plus i designed this with the idea of batch sparging at first but moving on to fly sparging in which case i want to be able to control the outflow fairly accurately