Steelbacks
Active Member
This may be heresy, but I'm just incurably inquisitive. To some of you it may also be a really stupid question, but as I'm new to brewing, you probably shouldn't expect anything better from me. Anyway, here goes.
In really simple terms, brewing beer starts with boiling up some grains and drawing off the liquid to use as food for yeast to turn into alcohol. Sparging rinses the grain to remove more of the sugars, flavours, etc. from the grains, but too much sparging can sometimes produce an 'off' flavour (?). However, distillers often produce a mash and leave the whole grains in for the duration of the ferment. Some even use partly milled/ground grains (even flour) in their mash. So, is it possible to brew beer and leave the grains in for the whole ferment? Can one use flour to ferment with rather than whole grains or rolled grains, or is this only suitable for producing a mash for distilling and completely unsuitable for beer production? I can see that flour would cause problems with sparging, but one wouldn't be doing that. Other than that I can't see any reason why this would affect the ferment, only the flavour of the final product. Any thoughts?
In really simple terms, brewing beer starts with boiling up some grains and drawing off the liquid to use as food for yeast to turn into alcohol. Sparging rinses the grain to remove more of the sugars, flavours, etc. from the grains, but too much sparging can sometimes produce an 'off' flavour (?). However, distillers often produce a mash and leave the whole grains in for the duration of the ferment. Some even use partly milled/ground grains (even flour) in their mash. So, is it possible to brew beer and leave the grains in for the whole ferment? Can one use flour to ferment with rather than whole grains or rolled grains, or is this only suitable for producing a mash for distilling and completely unsuitable for beer production? I can see that flour would cause problems with sparging, but one wouldn't be doing that. Other than that I can't see any reason why this would affect the ferment, only the flavour of the final product. Any thoughts?