I will be using the calculator on here for the water quantities, but I'm not totally clear on the process

Cheers
MB
I do it slightly different.When the mash is done, add the first batch of sparge water, stirry stirry, wait 10 mins, drain as fast as your manifold will allow.
Add second batch of water, stirry stirry, wait 10 mins, drain as fast as your manifold will allow.
That "vorlauf" step makes a BIG difference in clarity later on.mark4newman wrote:...I then Recirculate until it runs clear.
Then, slowly drain...
Yeah, that's important too, I definitely agree with that. But too much grain matter in the boil can lead to some harsh astringency, and even with a strong boil and decent break, can produce some hazy proteins, starches, etc, which take longer to clear from the finished beer than would otherwise be the case with a little more care coming out of the mash tun. Especially when you're using a poor-flocculating yeast strain to begin with, no sense making things even harder on it.boingy wrote:...It's clarity of wort OUT of the boiler you should worry about and that needs a decent boil, a decent hot break and a decent hop filter bed...
Jim, I reckon you need to add a few links to the Technique and All-Grain sections that point to the Knowledge Base. I thought I had seen a decent thing on Batch Sparging but I failed to find it. The All-Grain link has a section on sparging but nothing on batch.
I still have an upgrade to the navigation system for the whole site on my things to do list, but it's finding the time.boingy wrote:Jim, I reckon you need to add a few links to the Technique and All-Grain sections that point to the Knowledge Base. I thought I had seen a decent thing on Batch Sparging but I failed to find it. The All-Grain link has a section on sparging but nothing on batch.