According to the spec sheet Barke is slightly under modified malt. Weyermann light and dark floor malt is similar to Barke. Under modified malt is richer in enzyme content than high modified malt. Barke malt is low protein which means that it contains a lot of sugar.(homebrew malt is 12 to 16% protein) To take advantage of the rich malt the decoction method or the step mash method should be used, preferably, the decoction method. The decoction method produces authentic ale and lager. The step mash produces pseudo ale and lager. Single infusion won't take advantage of the rich malt, use less expensive high modified malt with single infusion brewing methods. A malt spec sheet is more valuable than an online recipe calculator, it's used to determine the quality of malt before the malt is purchased. A recipe that recommends buying two row pale malt is the same as recommending buying a two door car. A spec sheet comes with every bag of malt because malt is inconsistent. The numbers on the bar code sent to the maltster will obtain the info about the malt in the bag. Weyermann's good on that, they're German. Actually, recipes are a given.
Saccharification is listed on a spec sheet, but, saccharification isn't conversion. Depending on the maltster sometimes conversion is listed. The test uses 1 gallon of water per pound of malt and the rest is capped at 20 minutes. Malt is tested at 145, 153 and 155F, three bags of malt are tested, each bag at a single temperature.
I didn't see any temperatures that were used during mashing or if secondary fermentation was part of the recipe. If there wasn't a rest at 145F, conversion didn't take place. Beta is responsible for conversion and starch has nothing to do with it. Beta converts glucose released by Alpha during saccharification into fermentable, complex types of sugar. When conversion occurs, secondary fermentation occurs and during conditioning the beer naturally carbonates, no sugar or CO2 needed. To shorten the brew day conversion, dextrinization, gelatinization are omitted from recipes. Without the steps ale and lager cannot be produced. It's chemically and enzymatically impossible to make ale and lager by using a single temperature brewing procedure.