Dcpcooks
Well-Known Member
By my understanding Carapils has no enzymatic content but it has an estimated 70% extract efficiency. The sugars have been converted during the malting process. So it will contribute sugars to the wort. It will offer less sugars than a pilsner malt but only the difference between expected extraction rates. Pilsner malt should convert at 85% or greater and carapils should contribute 70% max so it’s only a fifteen percent difference. We’re seeing >50% less efficiency in this mash. If we were talking about a hypothetical fermentation that stalled at 20% attenuation I could see how carapils confused for pilsner malt could be the cause.
If you got “bad Grain” it would have to have been an unmalted grain for that to be the cause of the low extraction rate. I’m not aware of a good reason for a LHBS to carry unmalted grains in the first place so I’m not sure it is something they would have on hand to have miss packed.
I’m of the opinion that the sugars were not captured for either a mechanical or temperature related mash issue. So the fine mill setting created a massive dough ball that prevented conversion or the enzymes were denatured prior to finishing conversion by a hot mash temp.
I’m interested to see if we can isolate the cause on this one!
If you got “bad Grain” it would have to have been an unmalted grain for that to be the cause of the low extraction rate. I’m not aware of a good reason for a LHBS to carry unmalted grains in the first place so I’m not sure it is something they would have on hand to have miss packed.
I’m of the opinion that the sugars were not captured for either a mechanical or temperature related mash issue. So the fine mill setting created a massive dough ball that prevented conversion or the enzymes were denatured prior to finishing conversion by a hot mash temp.
I’m interested to see if we can isolate the cause on this one!