orange
Well-Known Member
Does anyone do this? I've just seen a how to invert sugar. :geek:
orange said:Does anyone do this? I've just seen a how to invert sugar. :geek:
If you mean by boiling it to a syrup with a bit of citric acid, that's a fallacy.orange said:Does anyone do this? I've just seen a how to invert sugar. :geek:
Moley said:If you mean by boiling it to a syrup with a bit of citric acid, that's a fallacy.
orange said:Does anyone do this? I've just seen a how to invert sugar. :geek:
Moley said:If you mean by boiling it to a syrup with a bit of citric acid, that's a fallacy.orange said:Does anyone do this? I've just seen a how to invert sugar. :geek:
I'm sure I've read somewhere that by that method you might manage to invert around 4%
Tony .... help!
Golden syrup does contain quite a high percentage of invert sugar.
luckyeddie said:What MAY be a fallacy is whether or not what the Belgians call 'candi sugar' is what we call 'candi sugar' (invert sugar) - also, whether giving the yeasties a head start by using invert sugar instead of sucrose really makes a massive difference is debatable.
richc said:luckyeddie said:What MAY be a fallacy is whether or not what the Belgians call 'candi sugar' is what we call 'candi sugar' (invert sugar) - also, whether giving the yeasties a head start by using invert sugar instead of sucrose really makes a massive difference is debatable.
This all comes with a big 'I may well be completely wrong' warning....
The stuff sold in brew shops isn't, AFAIK, either invert sugar or the stuff used by Belgian brewers. From my information,inverting sugar stops it from forming crystals and the stuff used by Belgian brewers is a syrup, neither description matches the crystals sold as candi sugar in brew shops.
The fallacy is that invert sugar starts fermentations faster than glucose. . . . The other issue with Inverting at home, is that a lot of the product Glucose and fructose is also bonded to the acid salt, in this case citrate, so in addition to glucose / fructose you also have glucose or fructose citrate . . .which needs further work to pass across the cell wall.luckyeddie said:No, it's not a fallacy - it's a hydrolysis reaction which is greatly catalysed in an acid environment. You can invert 4 or 5% without using acid, just by boiling sugar solution for 5 minutes. Add 1g of citric acid or cream of tartar to catalyse the reaction and you will convert pretty well all of the sucrose to the fructose/glucose mix in an hour.
Aleman said:The fallacy is that invert sugar starts fermentations faster than glucose. . . . The other issue with Inverting at home, is that a lot of the product Glucose and fructose is also bonded to the acid salt, in this case citrate, so in addition to glucose / fructose you also have glucose or fructose citrate . . .which needs further work to pass across the cell wall.luckyeddie said:No, it's not a fallacy - it's a hydrolysis reaction which is greatly catalysed in an acid environment. You can invert 4 or 5% without using acid, just by boiling sugar solution for 5 minutes. Add 1g of citric acid or cream of tartar to catalyse the reaction and you will convert pretty well all of the sucrose to the fructose/glucose mix in an hour.
Inverting sugar does not stop it forming crystals . . .both glucose and fructose have crystalline structures . . . however it does take a lot of energy to produce a dry sample . . .so most manufacturers usually stop when it hits about 80% solid (i.e Golden Syrup). . . . Sometimes it does go further and you do end up with sticky syrupy blocks of invert sugar. . . .due to the time and difficulty in dissolving it before use most breweries will use a syrup rather than the crystalline structure.
Darker grades of 'invert' sugar add different flavours as Eddie has pointed out . . .but do you need to invert the sucrose before you make the Candi sugar :hmm: :hmm: Personally I don't think so . . . but then Belgians and beers with Invert Sugar are not my thing anyway
Sorry, I think I must have lent them to the same neighbour who never returned my socket set or lawnmowerluckyeddie said:Has anyone got a spectrophotometer and a Lovibond tintometer I can borrow?
Moley said:Sorry, I think I must have lent them to the same neighbour who never returned my socket set or lawnmowerluckyeddie said:Has anyone got a spectrophotometer and a Lovibond tintometer I can borrow?
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