• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Help me understand BIAB efficiency/OG

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

kh54s10

Supporting Member
HBT Supporter
Joined
Aug 6, 2011
Messages
18,742
Reaction score
5,504
Location
Edgewater
I Brewed my second BIAB. Both ended up low on OG but decent efficiency.

hopville homebrew recipe
Floored IPA

Beer Style
Imperial IPA
Recipe Type
All Grain BIAB

malt & fermentables
% LB OZ MALT OR FERMENTABLE PPG °L
52% 5 0 Warminster Floor-Malted Maris Otter
42% 4 0 American Two-row Pale
4% 0 6 American Crystal 60L
3% 0 4 Cara-Pils/Dextrine
Batch size: 3.0 gallons
Original Gravity
1.081 / 19.6° Plato
(1.072 to 1.084)
Final Gravity
1.020 / 5.1° Plato
(1.018 to 1.022)
Color
11° SRM / 21° EBC
(Copper to Red/Lt. Brown)
Mash Efficiency
70%
hops
USE TIME OZ VARIETY FORM AA
boil 45 mins 1.0 Galena pellet 11.1
boil 15 mins 0.5 Tettnang pellet 4.8
boil 5 mins 0.5 Liberty leaf 4.0
Boil: 4.0 avg gallons for 60 minutes
Bitterness
67.1 IBU / 11 HBU
ƒ: Tinseth
BU:GU
0.83

Wyeast American Ale (1056)

Wyeast Trappist High Gravity (3787)

Alcohol
8.1% ABV / 6% ABW
Calories
267 per 12 oz.
misc
USE TIME AMOUNT INGREDIENT
boil 15 min 1 tsp Irish Moss
boil 10 min 0.1 liquid ozs Yeast Nutrient

I input for 70% efficiency and by Brewer's Friend's calculator it looks like I got 72.42% efficiency. What puzzles me is the recipe calls for an OG of 1.081. I measured 1.065. It does not worry me as far as the beer goes, but what I don't understand is that if I got the right efficiency why is the OG so low?

I got a good fine crush, fresh ingredients, 75 minute mash starting at 156 and ending at 151 degrees.

I also put the recipe in Brewer's Friend's recipe maker at 75% efficiency and it called for 1.090

Thanks in advance for your help:D
 
The directions say either pre-boil and pre=boil volume or OG and batch volume.

With pre-boil it calls for 1.050 OG at 75% and calculates 87.24% brewhouse efficiency on my brew.

It also says 1.066 efficiency at 100%

Yet the recipe calls for 1.081 OG?:confused:
 
Another thought is my efficiency for my all grain with batch sparging has been in the mid 70s to low 80s% and my OGs have been within a few points.
 
How did your volumes compare between expected and actual? Your batch size says 3 gal, but your boil volume says 4 gal, so which volumes are you inputting to the calculator?
 
I agree with gypsyhead, If your overall batch size is 4 gal then you got a 71% efficiency. If it was 3 gal then I'm afraid you only got a 53% efficiency. So make sure your using the right amount gallons in your calculator.
 
The worst case number I can run is 67% the best is 74%. And the calculator says the best I could achieve is 1.064 at 75% and the recipe set for 70% calls for 1.081. Brewer's Friend recipe calculator was even worse saying 75% would give 1.090

This is my best guess:
Batch Data:
Wort Volume:4.2 (gallons)
Gravity Measurement: 1.058

Gravity at 100% Efficiency: 1.085 - max
Gravity at 75% Efficiency: 1.064
Brew House Efficiency: 67.86%
Points / Pound / Gallon (ppg): 25.3

So I got pretty close to what this says, but still, the recipe calculators predicted way higher OG
 
Did you sparge? How did you get some of those sugars left behind in the bag? You had a sufficient mash time so the only thing I can think of is that you didn't get all the sugars out of the bag.

With my calculator I can only get a predicted OG of 1.081 with this recipe as a 3 gallon batch. When I bump it up to 4 gal, which is where you took your measurement, I get a predicted OG of 1.063.

Your recipe calls for a mash of 3 gallons and a boil of 4 gallons. After the boil you should have ended with about 3 gallons of beer to ferment. But you ended up with 4.2 watering down your OG.
 
Did you sparge? How did you get some of those sugars left behind in the bag? You had a sufficient mash time so the only thing I can think of is that you didn't get all the sugars out of the bag.

With my calculator I can only get a predicted OG of 1.081 with this recipe as a 3 gallon batch. When I bump it up to 4 gal, which is where you took your measurement, I get a predicted OG of 1.063.

Your recipe calls for a mash of 3 gallons and a boil of 4 gallons. After the boil you should have ended with about 3 gallons of beer to ferment. But you ended up with 4.2 watering down your OG.

I think that you led me to my problem. Using the BIAB calculator after creating the recipe I mashed with 5.4 gallons to allow for boil off and grain absorption. I squeezed the crap out of the bag (no sparge). I think this threw off the absorption amount and I ended up with a lot more pre-boil volume than was accounted for.

Now for some adjustments and another try to dial in things. I was about to give up BIAB and wait for warmer weather and batch sparge brewing.

In the mean time the worst that has happened is that this one is a session IPA.

Thanks again:rockin:
 
This was your second BIAB so I wouldn't focus so much on efficiency this early on. I'd recommend getting your process down (starting volumes, ending volumes, grain absorption, squeezing, sparge, no-sparge, grain crush, mash temps, mashout, etc.) and hitting your target OG first. Once you have these nailed, then start looking at your brewhouse efficiency. I know that I get at least 75 to 80% efficiency with my process so I don't bother calculating it any more.

Good luck.
 
As I said in my post I was not really worried about the beer, I was just wondering why my calculated efficiency and OG did not match what was predicted.

Thanks for the responses.

I think I now have a better handle on what to do differently to get closer to the recipe predictions. I also anticipate that I will have a very good beer, just not quite what I was aiming for.

We should aim for the bullseye, shouldn't we.:D
 
Back
Top