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Head Retention Confusion

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sremed60

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I'm interested in brewing Belgian Ales, (specifically tripels). I read that a thick head that stays is one of the marks of a true Belgian tripel and that they (Belgians) achieve this by multi-step mashing with a protein rest. I also read that some believe its not possible to get the true authentic desired head with a single infusion mash.

But then I read how today's malts are fully modified and don't need a protein rest, and in fact doing a protein rest with a fully modified malt could result in less body and head retention.

So I guess my question is:
Does anyone know if there is a significant difference between using a less modified malt and doing a protein rest vs. Just using fully modified malts and single infusion?
 
From what I am reading, to do a really classic example of a Belgian Strong Ale, you might wish to actually use under-modified Belgian malt and do the multi-step mash profile.

I think the doing a protein rest with highly modified malt might not produce the head or body that you are looking for in a well-made tripel.

I know it's a bit more work to source the malt, and do the step mash, but I think it would make a cool experiment to maybe compare the methods side-by-side and see how they compare on your system with your processes.
 
Being kind of lazy myself, I'd just try it with readily obtained malt and single infusion and see what I get from it. You can always adjust from there and you'll have delicious beer to drink!

Cheers
 
So, I'm going to take a different tack on this question: you can get perfectly fantastic rocky head with modern malts and a single infusion mash. The often overlooked reason for that great rocky head is carbonation. I would mash for medium body in the 155F range for an hour or less, and carbonate the beer to ~3vol CO2 in bottles that can handle it, or a keg. If you're worried about having enough dextrine or protein, you can always add half a pound of carapils or wheat to your grist without worrying about serious flavor impact.
 
Yes. I just tweaked the recipe I've been putting together and replaced the Vienna malt with equal proportions of carapils and Belgian wheat. I'm still going with a less modified German Pilsen and a 104°FF/20 min, 140°F/20 min and 155°F/40 min mash though.
 
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