The Mad Brewer
The mad brewer
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2022
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- 159
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- 143
Does it lose starch if the roots get too long when germinating? is there that perfect window to stop the process?
I think i have been confusing the roots with the acrospire I found a decent pic finally, and mine are just a hair shorter than the ones in the exmple so I think Im good.
View attachment 764635
i've had them get pretty big with (edit, lol) "out" soil before....They won't consume too much, unless they're sown on soil and proper roots develop to forage for nutrients.
Yep, once you let them forage for nutrients in the sun, it's like feeding Gizmo after midnight. Barley all over the place!i've had them get pretty big with soil before....
Yep, once you let them forage for nutrients in the sun, it's like feeding Gizmo after midnight. Barley all over the place!
Side question, any recommendations on storing amylase enzyme, doing a stout with a lot of oats
My brew store guy said because i was doing a lot of oats I should add the amylase enzymeclarify that for me?
once the malt is germinated, the 'storing' happens during the drying proccess. i use a box fan and sweater drying racks, let room temp air blow over the malt for a day maybe two, until the kernels are crisp, then it's time for 12 hours at 160f-200f to kiln the green flavor out of the malt....
My brew store guy said because i was doing a lot of oats I should add the amylase enzyme
2nd question, Kiln at 160F for 12 hours, I have been doing 300F for 20mins, is this wrong?
Im kinda self taught (still learning) when it comes to malting, kinda wish my local shops had some teaching hour ...so Im using what the internet said to do for steps to malt grain.i prefer low and slow, because i can't stir it in the oven...and even with dry malt, i think 300f will denature the enzymes? in my case i'm making base malt and just need to cook out the green taste?
300f would be something you'd do if you already stewed the wet malt at ~150f, to make a crystal malt...
and if you use amylase enzyme, you need to add gluco to the fermenter too...otherwise you'll have an insanely high FG...
can i ask the recipie? what kind of oats? wheat doesn't have a husk but plenty of conversion power....and whole oats have plenty of husk for lautering....
Sorry... Sorry... Sorry... after germinating I am kilning.... 12- 20 hours on low temp with dehydrator , then i toast the grains at 300FIm kinda self taught (still learning) when it comes to malting, kinda wish my local shops had some teaching hour ...so Im using what the internet said to do for steps to malt grain.
Im experimenting with a almost all oat (malted and I believe with hulls) stout, using about 4 lbs of wheat and a 1/2 lb of choc malted barley
Im kinda self taught
The 1st brew I malted myself was a Beer flavored broth soup, 2nd isn't anything to brag about but I can drink it, Im hoping to take what I ve learned and the 3rd batch will be better.me too! just started doing it back in beginning of 2016....
i think 300f is going to be rough on the malt even when the malt is dried to lock up the enzymes....
do they convert for you?
i too started with a dehydrator, but only could fit 8lbs in it. a box fan lets me dry 20lbs at a time....how are you deculming it? i recently got a dedicated clothes dryer that works good at cleaning it up....
drying rake of sorts.
No a drying rake, you lay out the grain on the floor and and rake it as it dries it... HAHA, yes Rack.... though I am surprised there are not more specialty tools for home brewers....some day.did you mean rack?
if so this is what i use...and just a box fan at room temp does the job pretty quick...
https://www.ebay.com/itm/353972738967?hash=item526a6b5b97:g:q14AAOSwcGpiOsRK
The 1st brew I malted myself was a Beer flavored broth soup,
No a drying rake, you lay out the grain on the floor and and rake it as it dries it... HAHA,
so you put a box fan under the rack? and dry inside or out in the sun?no joke, i'm kinda got the inventor in me too, try to figure out a automatic churner for when i'm sprouting to keep it even, and a misting system....
edit: but i need to figure it out on a fourth grade level of intelegance.....
so you put a box fan under the rack? and dry inside or out in the sun?
and im gonna try the low slow method next.
what is the room temp you dry at? My basement is about 55F in the winter and 65-68F in summer, I have a heat pump water heater that keeps it cool an dry (great for fermenting), wondering about drying in the basement or is that too cool?dry heat effects flavors different then wet heat, way back in like 2007, damn that doesn't seem that long ago, i figured why kiln, i boil it at 212f for an hour...but yeah, it takes low slow 'dry' heat to get rid of the green taste...
what is the room temp you dry at? My basement is about 55F in the winter and 65-68F in summer, I have a heat pump water heater that keeps it cool an dry (great for fermenting), wondering about drying in the basement or is that too cool?
Nice! Plant those at the edge of your garden and harvest in the fall. They look ready to grow.View attachment 767483
this is TOO long malt, it happened over night, wasn't done the afternoon before, i watered it. let it go till the morning. and now it's damn got grass shoots! but it will still make damn acceptable beer. the acrospires will get blown off in the dryer along with the rootlets!![]()
Nice! Plant those at the edge of your garden and harvest in the fall. They look ready to grow.