An Ankoù
Landlord.
Ah. "The computer says no!" I wouldn't trust brewing software to give me more than a general sort of ballpark figure neither do I accept that a homebrewer's wort will be as consistent as the concentrate in a can or sachet. I'm sure M E manufacturers adjust their product for consistency. Commercial and microbrewers aim for the same, but if you start doing a bit of googling (or duckduckgoing) you'll find similar queries about US-05 from them, too. Possibly for other yeasts, I haven't checked. I read a reply from a yeast lab worker who claims labs use autoclaved extract and autoclaving reduces fermentability and we should expect higher than declared attenuation. He didn't say anything about boiling and boil time, but another article on whisky production address wort filtering, boiling and autoclaving and, they say, all these have a detrimental effect on fermentability. I never realised that whisky producers didn't boil the wort before fermentation, but why should they?The brewing software accounted for all this and predicted 81% attenuation. The same as the beer being cloned. The OP says that they achieved the correct time and temperature. A homebrewers mash process should be just as accurate as a malt extract manufacturers. mash.
As far as consistency of results is concerned, this seems account for my experience with US-05 which is consistently higher than the declared 78-82% because I mash to achieve that. I think it also explains why brewing software is really only sticking a wet finger in the wind.
https://escarpmentlabs.com/blogs/resources/all-about-attenuation
Last edited: