Strange that Cwrw666 I have used Minch Lager and Ale for years and have always got less efficiency with the Lager.
Strange?
Strange?
That was my original point. "DP" is way too technical for most home-brewers to be arsing about with (and misinterpreting!), just now.All this above is a bit too technical for me...
Not so strange? I too end up with lower efficiency using European lager-like malts (or does that just make it stranger?).Strange that Cwrw666 I have used Minch Lager and Ale for years and have always got less efficiency with the Lager.
Strange?
... I don't understand what you're getting at there, "converted as low as 80%", conversion of starches to sugars (as tested by an iodine test, at least) is like being pregnant, either they're converted or they're not ... so what are you meaning when you say "80% converted"?I was originally interested in this to develop my historic brown malt emulations, to predict how it might convert using it as 100% of the grist (historically; it converted as low as 80% of the equivalent pale malt)
... Or are you saying that brewers mashing 100% historic, diastatic Brown Malt would achieve 80% of the extract from those mashing 100% Pale Malt? In which case I think you're confusing "diastatic power" for "potential extract", as the measure you should be researching ...
Use a lower quantity of pale malt and augment it with black malt? That appeared to be the patently (pun intended) elegant solution that was adopted wholesale by victorian brewers and drinkers, all having access to the before and after products to compare. Or am I being too simplistic in thinking the substitute for Diastatic brown malt as a base malt, is what they actually replaced it with?After all, it was the low extract that eventually saw brown malt off (as a "base" malt).
80% (20% lost) is just an extreme case I've read; I suspect it wasn't usually that bad.
But how do I emulate that?
... and there's the leap, that I don't understand ... you seem to have jumped to this assumption that the reason for that decrease in efficiency was the lower DP of the Brown Malt, completely overlooking the fact that increased kilning would have reduced the extract potential of those Brown Malt grains as well as denaturing (some of) the diastase enzymes ... isn't it likely that there were sufficient enzymes in those 100% diastatic Brown Malt beers for conversion, back then? Otherwise the beers produced would have been starchy/syrup-ey and when brewers started adding Pale Malt to their grists the (fully converted wort) beers produced would have been like bringing an entirely new product to market, instead of the same product produced more efficientlyAfter all, it was the low extract that eventually saw brown malt off (as a "base" malt) ... So I thought I'd play about with "diastatic power"
... more like "DP is of no use because @peebee didn't find it useful when he tried to use it for a use it was never intended" ... really peebee, concentrate on extract, then ensure that you have sufficient DP to convert ... literally no-one (except you, by implication) is suggesting DP can be used as some fine control efficiency reducer/increaser ... it's just a measure to check whether your mash will "work" or not, but as that, it may be quite usefulSo, DP is of no use to us lowly homebrewers because @peebee doesn't approve of anyone liberally using adjuncts.
... but they're not, they REALLY aren't! You may have found quite a few conversations and references to it by search, but across the various forums I frequent the subject hardly ever arises. Only when a novice brewer arrives wanting to brew a Guinness or main-stream, high-adjunct Lager clone or a Belgian Wit as their first/an early AG brew is the topic likely to be raised ... and even then it's more likely that the general rule of thumb "make sure you have at least half of your grist as base malt" will be quoted, rather than in its "make sure your grist averages 35/40L" formNovice brewers are being made to think "DP" is important and they must understand it.
Ha, yes. I'm trying to trace back my family tree, but Einstein's theories on Relativity are no help to me .... more like "DP is of no use because @peebee didn't find it useful when he tried to use it for a use it was never intended" ...
Hmm. I think my continuing a thread from another forum in a hijacked dead thread in this forum that I just happened by, was a bad move. I think I should restart this conversation in it's own thread complete with a far better introduction of what I'm doing. I'll work on it.Use a lower quantity of pale malt and augment it with black malt? That appeared to be the patently (pun intended) elegant solution that was adopted wholesale by victorian brewers and drinkers, all having access to the before and after products to compare. Or am I being too simplistic in thinking the substitute for Diastatic brown malt as a base malt, is what they actually replaced it with?
Crushed pale. Years ago I formulated a recipe to replicate an old English brown ale. I obtained a sack of brown malt which has a low diastatic quality so instead of using all brown i think from memory I did roughly 30% brown and the rest pale, with an extra overall quantity. That was back in the early 1990s. I recall it worked fine. Nowadays when I make this beer I use Bavarian smoked malt (small amount, just enough) and the rest is modern pale. I recall experimenting with Carapils having obtained a copy of the Durden Park Beer Club masterpiece "Old British beers and how to make them". That was fascinating. It told how to sour one's porters to make them as they really would have been all that time ago. Modern porters are really fakes. However I doubt many today would have the palate to match their sourness. Proper Guinness (the FES versions) and Harvey's Imperial Double Stout at 9% are perhaps the only true surviving relatives of this extraordinary beer type. Harvey's being the Real Deal. If you're ever in Sedgley (west Mids) go to the Beacon Hotel. Apart from being a fab Victorian pub they still do the sort of mild which historically just meant not soured (for porter). Sarah Hughes Ruby Mild. it used to be 8% but I think they've reduced it to something like 7.6%.I'm looking to add quite a lot of adjuncts, so will need the maximum enzyme content for conversion.
It's a shame, love an aged Porter/Stout, although, they do come and go on the craft beer scene as there are a fair few breweries that entertain mix fermentation, barrel aging and historical recreation projects. Deya have Pull The Night Around Your Shoulders a 6.8% bretted porter out at the moment. And, Burning Sky will have some variation of Monolith available.However I doubt many today would have the palate to match their sourness. Proper Guinness (the FES versions) and Harvey's Imperial Double Stout at 9% are perhaps the only true surviving relatives of this extraordinary beer type. Harvey's being the Real Deal.
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