Probably why I don't really utilize decoctions. Hah. Plus, it just seems like it makes brew day unnecessarily longer, but that just could be due to my unfamiliarity with it and not having a perfect process.
Anybody out there do decoctions religiously? If so, can you really tell a difference between decoctions and step mashing? Essentially, isn't it just a primitive way of achieving the same thing? Again, excuse my inexperience with decoctions.
I do decoction mashes for about 1/3 of my batches as I tend brew a lot of hefeweizens, weiss, dunkels and bocks, including weizenbocks. As you might notice, quite a few are wheat beers. Wheat beers can benefit from a decoction mash as wheat proteins are complex viscoelastic (mostly gluten) chains that can withstand high temperatures without denaturing or lysing. A decoction mash is what will break down the wheat protein into shorter chains of amino acids that are beneficial for yeast reproduction. Likewise, wheat starches are broken down in a decoction that can react with the free amino acids for malliard reactions when brought to a boil and alpha amylase when back in the mash tun.
Wheat beers aside, I do decoctions for bocks as well. Step mashing cannot achieve what a decoction mash can unless you step mash a portion of your mash to a boil, which is decoction mashing.
Most of my decoction mashes are a single decoction mash where I pull 2 gal of grain and 1.5 gal of grain/liquid/grist. I do not adjust this much, even for beers like a doppelbock that have a large grain bill over 18lbs (I brew 6 gal batches). For example on my standard hefeweizen, mash at 135f for 10 min then pull the decoction out, raise decoction mash temp to 155f (10min), hold at 155f for 10 min, then raise decoction mash temp to boil (10min), and remain at boil for 15 min.
Stirring the decoction for 15 mikes isn't hard, if it is, well, HTFU. Then add decoction to main mash, which will mash at about 155f for another 25 min. Im looking at a 80 min mash including the single decoction. Ive done a couple double decoctions and they do add another 40-60 min, though I have found a single decoction will work for anything I brew.
Primitive - maybe, however the bottom line is the chemistry behind a decoction is complex and will take your brews to a new level. I can taste (and so can you) the difference between a step mashed hefeweizen and one that has been through a decoction, given all other parameters remain the same. On one test, I tried out Ayinger Celebrator Doppelbock Clone in a split 12 gal batch where 6 gal was multi step mashed (122f 20 min, 149f 30min, 158f 30min, mashout 170f 10min) and the other half was given a single decoction). Time in mash between a multi step and the decoction was the almost same, but the taste was vastly different. The decoction was complex, with the fig/farmstyle applesauce/toffee/chocolate just blowing away the tastebuds with a warm alcohol that just glides on by. The multi step mash was good, but seemed flat in comparison. Yeast, fermentation etc parameters were the same.