John Coo's Brews
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- Joined
- Apr 28, 2020
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I'm messing around with a recipe that will incorporate both Belgian Pils and Belgian Pale Ale malts (roughly 50/50) - along with dextrose (at 17% of fermentables) - using Wyeast 3522 - Belgian Ardennes. Was thinking of working only the Pils through a protein rest at 122F, then raising through step infusion up to 152F for the Saccharide rest before adding the Pale ale malt (with the remainder of the mash/sparge unchanged) - my thinking is that the pale ale malt is fully modified, so doesn't need to go through the lower temp rest, and the extra water that is needed if you start all the grains at 122F then requires significantly more water on the step infusion to raise the temp up to the saccharide rest. For me, dilution and total volume after mashing is critical because I'm limited to a 5 gal boil vessel, so max 3.5 gal initial pre-boil volume.
Does this make sense to anyone - or am I just creating more troubles for myself with no real payoff?
Does this make sense to anyone - or am I just creating more troubles for myself with no real payoff?