jeffg
Well-Known Member
Brewed an all-grain brown ale (fat tire style) this weekend. My intent was to mash 9 lbs of grain at 154 degrees in 10 quarts of water, so I added 10 quarts of 175 degree water, figuring on about a 22 degree temperature drop. I ended up with 148 degree mash, so I added successive quarts of boiling water to bring up the temperature. end result was I had to add a full extra gallon of water over a period of 20-30 minutes, so my grains actually mashed about 90 minutes instead of 60 in 3.5 gallon of water instead of 2.5.
At the end of the day I still hit my target OG of 1.050 but does anyone have any opinions/ideas of how the additional water/time in the mash may affect the beer flavor? Less body maybe or no effect at all?
I also tried a new technique of cleaning out my mashtun while the wort was boiling and then adding the boiling wort back into the mashtun at the end of boil, cooled with a wort chiller, and then drained the chilled wort into my primary so that all of the wort passed through the bed of whole hops that collected on the false bottom and then through a secondary mesh strainer/funnel sitting on the carboy. The double filtration appears to have done a good job of removing a lot of the grain sediment and other particular matter. It was already fermenting this morning with a WL California ale yeast with no starter.
At the end of the day I still hit my target OG of 1.050 but does anyone have any opinions/ideas of how the additional water/time in the mash may affect the beer flavor? Less body maybe or no effect at all?
I also tried a new technique of cleaning out my mashtun while the wort was boiling and then adding the boiling wort back into the mashtun at the end of boil, cooled with a wort chiller, and then drained the chilled wort into my primary so that all of the wort passed through the bed of whole hops that collected on the false bottom and then through a secondary mesh strainer/funnel sitting on the carboy. The double filtration appears to have done a good job of removing a lot of the grain sediment and other particular matter. It was already fermenting this morning with a WL California ale yeast with no starter.