InfiniteThought
Well-Known Member
it appears through experimentation with GF certified oats that I cannot tolerate them at all. None of this is buy choice...been a diagnosed celiac for 2 years and was undiagnosed for many years before that.
it appears through experimentation with GF certified oats that I cannot tolerate them at all. None of this is buy choice...been a diagnosed celiac for 2 years and was undiagnosed for many years before that.
what exactly do you do with the banana? I am guessing you just chop it up and throw it in the boil.
How cool is that?! I'm going to have to pay attention to these GF threads more closely there's some really fascinating things being done to push the limits of GF brewing, and brewing in general. I just popped into this thread because it's a B-Day Brew (since that's in my thought process these days) and stayed because DKershner is such a bloody brilliant guy to read his posts!
Since I like to experiment anyway, a lot of stuff people are doing out of necessity on this topic, gets my creative brewing juices flowing.
wow, thanks! how do you find all of that?
lets see, a normal large banana has approximately 15 g of carbohydrate, not sure how much of it is fermentable but that is so little I am not sure that it really matters. I usually get fairly poor conversions on the grain because they are not malted so low values would be right. I think ill add just a few oz more Candi to bump it back up to 1.140, just so I don't have to mess with my hop balance again, plus I like round numbers.
Minimash
6#millet 30 pts @ 75% fermentability 7.5 remain
3#red rice 15pts @ 80% fermentability 3 remain
1/2# whole quinoa 2.5pts @ 75% fermentability .625 remain
mash 145-150 for 1 hour
sparge 165
FG should be... 29.1pts or 1.030.
If ANYONE AT ALL sees something wrong with my math, or one of my complete guesses, please let me know.
Aren't the grains unmalted? I would think he could save himself 30 minutes and just do a steep with these to get color and some grain characteristics? Did I miss something about amylase or anything else here?
The way I understand it, amylase is somewhat of a replacement for the malting process turning starches (complex carbohydrates/sugars) to sugars (simple sugars). Therefore some sugar would be created through the process, just not as much as if they were malted.
I could be wrong.
EDIT: I could have also read your post wrong...and you were asking if he was using amylase.
The way I understand it, amylase is somewhat of a replacement for the malting process turning starches (complex carbohydrates/sugars) to sugars (simple sugars). Therefore some sugar would be created through the process, just not as much as if they were malted.
I could be wrong.
EDIT: I could have also read your post wrong...and you were asking if he was using amylase.
No, you read it right. I'm just curious to see how much gets converted...I have a 5 gallon pail of sorghum berries... I'm just thinking though, if not much sugar is going to be converted, wouldn't he be better off roasting and steeping them instead?
I am having a hard time cracking the millet, I need a better grain mill. mine is really, really old hand crank and I run the millet through it 3-4 times and only a small percentage is actually damaged. whatever, Ill figure it out.
edit: this thread is the top google result for "gluten free barleywine" go us!