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

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

How does boiling affect Diaccetyl.

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

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

i4ourgot

Supporting Member
HBT Supporter
Joined
Dec 30, 2011
Messages
308
Reaction score
12
Location
Coloma
I was brewing a batch of beer today and my buddy was saying he boils longer to limit the amount of diacetyl in his beer. I was just wondering if this help or if fermentation plays a bigger part in limiting the amount of diacetyl.
 
i4ourgot said:
I was brewing a batch of beer today and my buddy was saying he boils longer to limit the amount of diacetyl in his beer. I was just wondering if this help or if fermentation plays a bigger part in limiting the amount of diacetyl.

It sounds like he may have been confusing diacetyl and DMS.
 
I think your buddy is mistaken about what he is preventing. Diacetyl is a yeast byproduct. A long boil isn't going to do anything about it. On the flip side, DMS definitely can be limited with a longer boil. A vigorous 60 minute boil is usually plenty, but 90 minute is a good safety net when using lots of pilsner. (Pilsner is more prone to DMS issues)
 
Great job guys.

Only thing I can add is to say that chilling quickly to 141F or below also helps with DMS prevention (so the precursors don't convert into DMS).

Diacetyl is a problem for impatient brewers; it normally means you didn't leave the beer on the yeast long enough. Diacetyl levels can get high early in fermentation if you didn't pitch enough healthy yeast, ESPECIALLY lager yeast or if you pitch lager yeast at room temp (just dumb; don't do it), some strains are poor at taking diacetyl back up and their description normally will state this. Warming the beer back up towards the end of fermentation ala the "diacetyl rest" can help coax the yeast into converting the diacetyl and so can "krausening" (which I'd recommend for really diacetyly lagers). -Typically diacetyl isn't a problem with ales unless you immediately cold crash after the bubbles stop evolving from the fermenter (impatient brewer problem again).

There are home brewer additives that can prevent the formation of diacetyl in the first place but nothing except yeast that can fix the problem after it's formed; possibly recommend using these with some of the really malty bock / oktoberfest lager strains.


The evaporation rates on home brewer scale equipment (especially 5 and 10 gallon batches) is MANY, MANY times higher than a production brewery as the surface area to volume ratios are much higher; 90 minute boils even for 100% pilsner malt isn't really required if you have a strong rolling boil @ 5-10 gallons. (For big brewers, sure, for home brewers there's really no reason to do this.)


Adam
 
Back
Top