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* After the first runnings are collected, the turbid portion is added back to the mash. This heats the mash to a mash-out temperature. After a short settling time this is also lautered to the boil kettle.
* The mash is sparged with especially hot water (~88°C, ~190°F). This pulls more tannins that a traditional sparging temperature would.
* Due to the amount of water that is needed to raise the temperatures at each rest, an extended boil of 3-4 hours is typically necessary in order to arrive at a desired post boil gravity.
Turbid mashing is possible with more simple systems with some modifications to the process. For example, if a second kettle is not available to hold turbid wort while keeping the main bottle kettle clear to collect runnings, the turbid wort can be collected into the main single boil kettle. It is then necessary to add this turbid wort back before collecting the first runnings. In this case, the turbid wort rather than an infusion of near-boiling water is used to raise the mash to the final temperature (step 4 above), therefore clearing the boil kettle to receive the wort. A system such as this is employed by [[3 Fonteinen]] as they have only one boil kettle. Jester King follows a similar process, where the turbid wort is added back at the end of the mash before collecting wort for the boil, for their Spon series <ref name='Jester King on the Sour Hour episode 55'>[http://www.thebrewingnetwork.com/sour-hour-episode-55/ Jester King on the Sour Hour, episode 55]</ref> (discussion starts ~9 minutes in). An extra fermentaiton tank can serve as a hot liquor tank as needed<ref>[https://www.facebook.com/groups/MilkTheFunk/permalink/1797882636906609/?comment_id=1798049140223292&comment_tracking=%7B%22tn%22%3A%22R%22%7D MTF discussion about using a fermenter as a HLT]</ref>. Turbid mashing is also fully possible with brew in a bag (BIAB - see [https://www.facebook.com/groups/MilkTheFunk/permalink/1879021212126084/ this MTF thread for tips on turbid mashing in BIAB]).