Brew Day Essentials
Lautering and Sparging
From Mash to Kettle
After the mash, you need to separate the sweet {{glossary:wort}} from the spent grain. This two-stage process — lautering and {{glossary:sparging}} — determines your brewhouse efficiency and wort clarity.
Lautering
Lautering is the act of draining wort through the grain bed, which acts as a natural filter. The goal is to collect clear, sugar-rich liquid while leaving grain particles behind.
The grain bed sits atop a false bottom, manifold, or mesh screen that supports the bed while allowing liquid to drain. The key is establishing the grain bed as an effective filter before collecting wort into the kettle.
Vorlauf
Before draining wort to the kettle, recirculate the first 1-2 quarts back into the mash tun. This initial runoff (called vorlauf) is cloudy with grain particles. Gently pour it back on top of the grain bed until the runoff clears. A clear vorlauf indicates the grain bed is set and filtering properly.
Fly Sparging
Fly sparging is the traditional continuous method. While wort drains from the bottom of the mash tun, hot sparge water (168-170 F) is gently sprinkled over the top of the grain bed at a matching rate. The goal is to maintain a consistent liquid level above the grain bed.
Advantages: Highest efficiency (typically 75-85%). Smooth, gradual sugar extraction.
Disadvantages: Takes 45-90 minutes. Requires a sparge arm or careful manual pouring. Risk of channeling if water hits the grain bed unevenly. Risk of extracting tannins if sparge water pH exceeds 5.8 or temperature exceeds 170 F.
Batch Sparging
Batch sparging drains the mash tun completely, then refills it with a measured volume of hot sparge water. After a brief rest (10 minutes) and another vorlauf, the second runnings are drained. Some brewers do a third sparge.
Advantages: Simpler and faster than fly sparging. Less risk of channeling. Good efficiency (70-80%) with proper technique.
Disadvantages: Slightly lower efficiency than fly sparging. More water handling.
No-Sparge Brewing
No-sparge uses the entire water volume in the mash — no additional rinse water is added. The mash is drained directly to the kettle. This requires a larger grain bill to compensate for lower efficiency (55-65%) but produces an exceptionally rich, malty wort.
No-sparge is popular with BIAB brewers and for styles where intense malt character is desired.
Troubleshooting Stuck Sparges
A stuck sparge occurs when the grain bed compacts and stops draining. Causes include too-fine a crush, excessive suction (draining too fast), or high percentages of wheat, rye, or oats.
Fixes: stir the top inch of the grain bed gently, add rice hulls to the mash (5-10% of grain bill), or slow the drain rate. Prevention is better than cure.
Collecting Wort
Stop sparging when the kettle reaches your pre-boil volume or when the runoff gravity drops below 1.010. Collecting wort below this gravity risks extracting astringent tannins from grain husks, which create harsh, drying off-flavors in the finished beer.