OK, I'll send the check when I pony up and buy the DO probe!
I ordered some as well. I don't trust that it will do the job that smb does in the mash so I'm looking more to see if it helps on the cold side first. Maybe the Brewtan will give a little extra protection post boil when the smb is all used up? Maybe help in finding as well?
Reading this interesting presentation, it looks like this requires a. Filter stage in order to remove it from the beer.
K concentrations above 10ppm in the mash is detrimental, so the references say.
Its in Narziss, maybe Band 2 or Abriss. We started off with Kmeta and I don't think we saw any negative effects, but the documentation said to stay away from it, so we did.
"The sample was good". Describe good?
I asked in a previous post in this thread why adding > 10 mg/L K to a product that typically contains 500 - 1000 was a problem. I didn't get an answer.I'm interested in what kind of detriments to the mash that >10ppm K is said to have in your references.
I asked in a previous post in this thread why adding > 10 mg/L K to a product that typically contains 500 - 1000 was a problem. I didn't get an answer.
I asked in a previous post in this thread why adding > 10 mg/L K to a product that typically contains 500 - 1000 was a problem. I didn't get an answer.
We originally started using kmeta and got the same great results we're seeing with nameta. I don't think it is a huge issue and am not certain why Narziss says what he says, but our logic was a bit Pascal-ish because nameta and kmeta are basically the same price and both widely available anyway.
I'm sure that as more people experiment with the LODO process it will become clearer what are the essential aspects, and what parts are more forgiving. The whole idea of the pdf was to give everyone a common baseline, as in "if you follow this procedure exactly we can guarantee that you will see the same results as us". That doesn't mean that the process shouldn't evolve over time.
I didn't know that about the amount of potassium in barley. That's very interesting, and everything I find online indicates your are 100% correct (no surprise there).
That does make for an interesting point in regards to K- vs Na-metabite in this low oxygen brewing process, and which element might go more unnoticed in beer brewing. At the levels of Na and K found in beer (39ppm vs 278ppm, respectively), it would seem that K would go totally unnoticed at it's minor additional levels, as opposed to the Na which, granted, would still be fairly minor. But, it certainly makes more sense that an added 25ppm (for example) to 278 K is much less noticeable than 25ppm to 39 Na. This may make a case that Kmeta is the "better" choice of the two? Perhaps, this is too simplistic and there's something I'm overlooking.
I wonder why the Narziss reference would indicate that Kmeta is a detriment to the mash. I would assume he was well aware of the levels of K in malt already.
Hmm, not sure what to make of all of this besides maybe it's safe to say that either metabite powder should work equally as well? I don't know.
As for now, I'm thinking Kmeta might be just as, or more, useful than NaMeta. I happened to have Kmeta for my first brew, now I have NaMeta. I've also got Lactic and Phosphoric acids for brewing. I'm set for any kind of brewing![]()
I've pulled 22 mmHg on a glass carboy before (though i wouldn't recommend repeating my folly).
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So, while they agree that reduction of hotside O2 is beneficial to Hellesbier, they don't think that the extent of your assertions are necessary. Not wrong, just more than required.
I wonder why the Narziss reference would indicate that Kmeta is a detriment to the mash. I would assume he was well aware of the levels of K in malt already.
Hmm, not sure what to make of all of this besides maybe it's safe to say that either metabite powder should work equally as well? I don't know.
Your a brave man.
I've imploded small flasks in the lab doing work under vacuum and it was some kind of disaster. Almost a bigger bang then over pressuring, so I can't imagine pulling a vacuum on a carboy without a blast shield.
Dry hopping while the yeast is still in suspension doesn't work well. A lot of the hop oils get dragged down and out of suspension when the yeast drops.
I don't see a need to sit on a keg of a hop-forward beer for a few weeks, when I can crash the yeast out and hit it with finings to produce crystal clear beer within a week of the ferment being finished.
I've carried this experiment as far as I'm willing to, within the limits of the brewing equipment I have and without major alterations to my process.
They don't specify whether the 0.4 is 95% CI or one sigma or anything about it. If I have read the specs right then isn't this meter too inaccurate for measuring DO where you are trying to determine <0.2ppm?
Since I read this, I've done 3 batches with as "low oxygen" as possible, incl. mash caps, preboil, NaMeta, etc. The first batch is almost ready now.
The questions I have are:
1. BIAB no sparge seems PERFECT for this if you 1) drain the bag low-to-kettle level/no splashing while it drains, and 2) don't squeeze (I don't anyway).
2. How do you do this approach with ales, IPA dry hops, secondaries etc.?
3. THIS IS THE BIG ONE! Is lowering the HSA/Hot Side Oxidation dramatically going to create a better product even if I can't get under the mythical PPM's/PPB's you're talking about?
4. I tried a couple Ayinger beers, and while they were good, they weren't substantially better than other beers on the same import shelf.
Am I missing anything?...