Tom Archer.
New Member
- Joined
- Apr 4, 2023
- Messages
- 16
- Reaction score
- 10
As a newbie, I'm looking and learning, and some things seem odd.
- DME is manufactured by boiling and spray drying wort. The powder is very readily soluble.
- It seems widely accepted that bacteria don't survive above 165F/75C
But every video on YouTube and every book description of making a starter refers to dissolving the DME and then boiling it, which in a conical flask seems to readily invite boil over.
Why not just dissolve the DME in a pan at around 80C, and then dump it into a sanitised flask? Less electricity, less potential mess..
..but as no-one seems to recommend this, is there a reason?
- DME is manufactured by boiling and spray drying wort. The powder is very readily soluble.
- It seems widely accepted that bacteria don't survive above 165F/75C
But every video on YouTube and every book description of making a starter refers to dissolving the DME and then boiling it, which in a conical flask seems to readily invite boil over.
Why not just dissolve the DME in a pan at around 80C, and then dump it into a sanitised flask? Less electricity, less potential mess..
..but as no-one seems to recommend this, is there a reason?