An Ankoù
Landlord.
I've just been looking at the Milk Stout recipe posted by @foxy (https://www.thehomebrewforum.co.uk/threads/what-did-you-brew-today.64550/post-1270962) and I'm wondering about the best time to add lactose to sweeten the beer. This is my thinking:
When we add sucrose to a boil for whatever reason, the sucrose will be hydrolised to some extent, depending on the pH and the length of time it is boiled, into its constituent monosaccharides. But since all three sugars are fermentable, we're not over-concerned about how much of the sugar has been converted. Does the same thing happen with lactose? Is it hydrolised into glucose and galactose by boiling it in a acidified solution? If so, then is galactose fermentable by beer yeasts? I wonder if it might not be better to add the lactose after the boil to get the best sweetening effect from it.
Of course, all my suppositions might be a load of old nonsense, i which case it wouldn't matter.
When we add sucrose to a boil for whatever reason, the sucrose will be hydrolised to some extent, depending on the pH and the length of time it is boiled, into its constituent monosaccharides. But since all three sugars are fermentable, we're not over-concerned about how much of the sugar has been converted. Does the same thing happen with lactose? Is it hydrolised into glucose and galactose by boiling it in a acidified solution? If so, then is galactose fermentable by beer yeasts? I wonder if it might not be better to add the lactose after the boil to get the best sweetening effect from it.
Of course, all my suppositions might be a load of old nonsense, i which case it wouldn't matter.