Brewnaldo
Landlord.
- Joined
- Nov 21, 2019
- Messages
- 1,700
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I'm a little dissatisfied with a current brew, well actually a couple of them in terms of finish/body.
And I have been thinking, historically I think I probably find it quite hard to hit and maintain a mash temperature that leaves enough unfermentable to give the beer some body at the end. Everything seems to finish dry these days.
Now it might be as simple as not paying enough attention to the attenuation profile of the yeast but then, I'm settled on W34/70 for lagers so......
Has anyone ever carried out a high temp mini mash to add to the main batch, what I'm thinking here is, 500g to 1kg of pale or Munich for a lager, mashed on the stove top in 2 or 3 litres of water and held way up at like 72 degrees, thus providing a wee boost of non fermentatbles to an otherwise standard 65degC mash.
Can anyone see any issues here, and does brewfather have a method of accounting for this? I can see you can check non fermentable on a grain addition, but it wouldn't ALL be non feremntable presumably.
Any musings appreciated
And I have been thinking, historically I think I probably find it quite hard to hit and maintain a mash temperature that leaves enough unfermentable to give the beer some body at the end. Everything seems to finish dry these days.
Now it might be as simple as not paying enough attention to the attenuation profile of the yeast but then, I'm settled on W34/70 for lagers so......
Has anyone ever carried out a high temp mini mash to add to the main batch, what I'm thinking here is, 500g to 1kg of pale or Munich for a lager, mashed on the stove top in 2 or 3 litres of water and held way up at like 72 degrees, thus providing a wee boost of non fermentatbles to an otherwise standard 65degC mash.
Can anyone see any issues here, and does brewfather have a method of accounting for this? I can see you can check non fermentable on a grain addition, but it wouldn't ALL be non feremntable presumably.
Any musings appreciated