Thanks for the guide Ralph!
I took the mini biab NRB's All Amarillo American Pale Ale recipe to the home brew shop since that was the one Ralph used in the guide. While I was chatting with the brew shop guys I mentioned that I'd prefer to be doing a Belgian Wit. So, they gave me up a Wit recipe for the same vessel volume, water required, brew length etc.
A few questions and other notes I have after the process:
Question 1:
Do I need to make sure that the whole 18.49 litres of water goes in?
The way Ralph described it, he got 15 litres up to strike temperature. Then added the grain. Then added "the remaining 3-odd litres of water to fill the pot right up".
We started with 15 litres. Then the grain. But all we could fit was another 1.7 litres. Maybe my recipe has grains that displace more water?
I wasn't sure whether it was crucial to put all of the 18.49 litres in. So, when we took the bag out, we used 1.8 litres to sparge the bag in a big bowl as described in the maxi biab guide.
The SG after the mash and sparge was 1032 with about 15.5 litres volume. I was worried that I may have diluted it too much by adding the sparge water, but maybe my recipe doesn't yield as much.
After the boil, it was SG 1042 and about 13 litres volume.
Question 2:
We got a strike temperature of 68 degrees celcius before we added the grain. After we added the grain and topped up the water, we were at 66 degrees. We left the probe thermometer in. By the time an hour had passed, we were down to 62 degrees. At the end of 90 minutes, we were at 60 degrees.
We had the pot pretty well insulated. There were two towels underneath it (one folded a few times). A towel, then a zipped up fleece jacket then another towel around it. And a couple more tea towels on top.
Should we have started with a higher temperature? Is this much temperature loss normal or did we get our insulation wrong?
Question 3:
We ended up with 9.5 litres in the fermenter. We poured untill we were just getting to the murky stuff in the bottom of the fermenter. Afterwards, we poured the murk into a measuring jug and it turned out we had two litres of it. Ralph said leave the last one litre or so. So, it's probably splitting hairs to ask this, but my question is: should we have poured some more of the murk into the fermenter?