MobCraft Brewday on Spike System

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  • čas přidán 13. 06. 2024
  • Interested in how the Spike System is used?? Henry from MobCraft Brewing walks you through, step by step, of a typical brew day using their pilot Spike System!
    spikebrewing.com/pages/spike-...
    0:00 - Intro with Ben and Henry
    1:15 - False Bottom Installation
    1:40 - Hose Setup for Mashing
    2:22 - Filling the HLT
    2:45 - Setting Strike Temperature
    3:04 - Starting the Mash Recirculation
    4:11 - Mashing
    5:20 - Positioning Hoses for Sparging
    5:51 - Sparging and Moving to Boil Kettle
    6:34 - Starting the Boil
    6:57 - Boiling
    7:24 - Hop Additions
    7:44 - Whirlpool
    8:23 - Chill & Drain
    9:40 - Cleaning the Trio System
    10:54 - Outro with Ben and Henry

Komentáře • 46

  • @kennycelt
    @kennycelt Před rokem

    Great informative video, hope to pull together some equipment and start brewing soon! Sláinte 🇮🇪

  • @muzguz7276
    @muzguz7276 Před 4 lety +1

    Great video. Been using my HERMs for some time but still picked up pointers. Spike System certainly looks like a nice setup.

  • @canelohillshomebrewery4328

    Thanks for this video! I have had to guess how to use your system. mine is gas but other than that the same. I never knew how you recommended to brew with your system. I would love to see a video like this with just a little more detail. I love my SPIKE equipment!!

  • @WreckedBrewery
    @WreckedBrewery Před 6 lety +3

    This is great! I love my Spike Brewing kettles on my single tier propane based rig and now I want to buy this system! This will really improve my temps I think. Thanks for showing the process! Cheers!

  • @eligreen6391
    @eligreen6391 Před 5 lety +1

    This is great! Just got my 15 gallon Spike and this has been really helpful!

  • @neilsheldon8355
    @neilsheldon8355 Před 4 lety

    Nice Setup! ... A little fast for an old timer like me, but I'll watch it again until I get it. Thanks!

  • @brandongrennan7602
    @brandongrennan7602 Před 3 lety

    Great video!! Thanks for sharing.

  • @natashawilson1687
    @natashawilson1687 Před 3 lety

    That looks like a really nice system.

  • @EmineMingXue
    @EmineMingXue Před 5 lety

    Nice sharing. Gratitude from China.:)

  • @NJPestchanker
    @NJPestchanker Před 6 lety

    Hello from Argentina. I've some questions. What do you do with the cold break? Do you let the cold trub get into the fermenter? Your system rocks!! Cheers!

  • @Kidsoftheblackhole
    @Kidsoftheblackhole Před 5 lety

    I would think going from top to bottom in the HLT coil would allow "easier" flow. Would i benefit from going bottom to top? I too have a 3 vessel set up.

  • @travi5885
    @travi5885 Před 5 lety +1

    Henry seems like the nicest dude

  • @tacosrock4225
    @tacosrock4225 Před 5 lety

    Great video! I see while mashing in, you guys kept the recirculation going instead of mashing in with the valves closed and then opening them back up to recirculate. Any noticing differences in either method? Im supposing many stop the recirculation while mashing in, to avoid compressing the grain bed while trying to get all of the dough balls out. Recirculating while mashing in gives the opportunity of the HERMS system to regulate the temperature loss from adding grain.

    • @walkerrichardson
      @walkerrichardson Před 5 lety

      I've ran maybe 20 batches on my Spike System and I have had the greatest success (fewest stuck sparges) by leaving the re-circulation going maybe 50% and just slowly pouring in my grains with a light stir. This does let the HERMS moderate the temperature loss and helps to set the grain bed without jamming anything up.

  • @dalemuir4549
    @dalemuir4549 Před 5 lety +2

    Hi, great video. I noticed that during the cleaning sequence there were no spent grains in the mash tun. How do you empty the mash tun before cleaning?

    • @Youngsta0
      @Youngsta0 Před 5 lety +1

      Disconnect it and dump it? or scoop it out?

    • @dylanelks6380
      @dylanelks6380 Před 5 lety +1

      Personally, I scoop the grains out with a big plastic pitcher until there's maybe 2-3 inches of grain at the bottom, and finish off with a wet/dry shop vac... Works VERY well.

  • @TheTorqueMusic
    @TheTorqueMusic Před 3 lety

    Have You considered a sligtly conical button of the boil kettle, with a centered valve?
    This would make an even better whirlpooling, and easy trub exit/dranage.... ;-)

  • @ElDuardo01
    @ElDuardo01 Před 6 lety

    Hello, I have a question regarding sparging temperature. In the mashing process the hlt is at about 150°F im I correct? If you have to sparge at 167°F, how do you heat up that water instantly so to sparge at said temperature? Its not clear in the video when you heat up the sparge water to get to 167°F. My guess is that you start the sparging at mashing temp and heat the water until you get to sparging temp? Am I correct? Would love some help in this issue. Cheers!

    • @SpikeBrewing
      @SpikeBrewing  Před 6 lety +3

      If you're mashing at 155F your HLT will be about 157-158F. If you would like to sparge with 167F you can turn your HLT up the last 5-10mins when mashing or turn the HLT up at beginning of sparge and it will gain the 10 degrees in less than 10mins.

  • @MrPd23322
    @MrPd23322 Před 6 lety

    Awesomeness...cannot wait for me to buy once and cry once albeit 10 gallon system... one thing to lowrr my crying factor...is I an electronic tech so I have already made my control panel .lol

  • @cattigereyes1
    @cattigereyes1 Před 6 lety +2

    Now I really would love to buy one of these
    Systems one can dream right? Reality though

  • @jsimpson8018
    @jsimpson8018 Před 5 lety

    So the recipes on the site are directly scaleable from 5 gallons to the 15 gallon system? Just triple the ingredients? Rookie question I know.

    • @patf03
      @patf03 Před 5 lety

      Think all his beer that he brews are scaled down to 5 gallon home brew recipes

    • @ingy23
      @ingy23 Před 5 lety +1

      Hopefully you have already found out by now but for other people no you can't just multiply to work out required ingredients for larger batches but you can use programs like beersmith to scale recipes up and down.

  • @p3brews736
    @p3brews736 Před 4 lety

    Love it, except i drooled my beer onto my keyboard. How can we win a 20 gal system?

  • @Awoit
    @Awoit Před 4 lety

    How do you aerate if you go straight from whirlpool into the conical?

    • @SpikeBrewing
      @SpikeBrewing  Před 4 lety +1

      We recommend aerating in the conical using our carb/oxygen stone

  • @willshinn737
    @willshinn737 Před 2 lety

    So.... Spike, it looks like you would have to remove the false bottom from the mash-tun after removing the grains, prior to cleaning, with the brew wash, but this wasn't clear to me after watching the video. The video seems to indicate the system can be cleaned without removing the false bottom, but if that is so it seems there would be grain residue and liquid solution trapped under it, which couldn't be removed any other way than inverting the tun and letting it drain out. To clarify, is cleaning done with the false bottom in place or removed? Thanks in advance.

  • @stevebos4566
    @stevebos4566 Před 6 lety

    Why did you place the output of the pumps lower than the input? If you flipped them around and had the output of the pump as the highest point any air in the system would naturally flow out. It would almost elminate the need for the air bleed system and also prevent a slow building up air in the pump head when your moving low volumes of water.

    • @SpikeBrewing
      @SpikeBrewing  Před 6 lety +3

      We found this orientation with air bleeds to work the best and be the most fool proof. One example of the way you described being an issue with from the MT out to the pump to the HERMS coil. When the coil is filled with wort/water the air can't bleed through the system. The air gets trapped between the MT out and HERMS coil in. This can cause the pump to not prime.

    • @stevebos4566
      @stevebos4566 Před 6 lety

      Spike Brewing I am sure you have done alot of testing to come to this conclusion. I have just never seen the output of the pump lower than the input. I thought i needed an air bleed untill i changed the orientation of my pump. Having the output higher has mitigated any air bleed issues. It might be worth just flipping the pumps around and seeing how it works.

    • @SpikeBrewing
      @SpikeBrewing  Před 6 lety +4

      This was one of the first setups we tried. The air bleeds were a much more reliable option from our testing.

  • @silvermediastudio
    @silvermediastudio Před 3 lety

    Something I noticed, there's no oxygenation stage when moving wort to the fermenter, or after pitching yeast. By design?

    • @mmichaelou812
      @mmichaelou812 Před 2 lety

      I would guess that's what the whirlpool stage is for

    • @silvermediastudio
      @silvermediastudio Před 2 lety

      @@mmichaelou812 Good thought, but the whirlpool is too gentle, it doesn't oxygenate the wort. At best, the aeration can increase the level by about 8% which doesn't move the needle much, maybe 2ppm. It takes a micron stone or some pretty aggressive agitation to get the numbers up to 8-10ppm.

    • @mmichaelou812
      @mmichaelou812 Před 2 lety

      Good to know - I have been using my auto siphon to pump air into the wort and so far so good. But I'm just a hack haha

    • @silvermediastudio
      @silvermediastudio Před 2 lety

      @@mmichaelou812 Nothing wrong with that; what you're doing definitely gets oxygen in there, more so than doing nothing.

  • @SofaKings
    @SofaKings Před 6 lety

    can u make spirits with this system as well? gin , vodka, whisky and rum?

  • @pete-davis-photography
    @pete-davis-photography Před 4 lety +1

    Rhubarb!? That has no place in beer. In a pie, with custard on top.

  • @sodapopjenkins
    @sodapopjenkins Před 3 lety +1

    music is a bit of distraction ... good content otherwise.