Let me make sure I have this straight. You're saying ff I used to target 50 mg/l SMB but I switch to a SMB/AA/BB blend, I should still target a total concentration of those three at 50 mg/l, which is about 0.19 g/gal?
I was going to just shoot for reducing my SMB down to around 35 mg/l until I read this. Plan is to use the 45/45/10 blend.
I gotta say, I found that pdf somewhat depressing.
I'm crazy OC about post-fermentation O2 exposure, now I find I'm barely solving half the issues![]()
If you use all 3 (45/45/10) and dosed it at .37g/gal you would end up with roughly 45ppm meta. If you dosed at .25g/gal you would be at 30ppm
Literally all I brew is helles, pils and dunkel. I am the beerery over here. I will head over there.
Reading about the use of SMB in the mash reminds me of the Heady Topper analysis that was done showing a metric ton of sulfate added. Have also read that Kimmich is highly focused on low DO in the packaged beer. Any chance sulfate would have a similar anti-ox effect as SMB in the mash?
It's fairly unlikely that they are using SMB to control oxygen ingress, but I suppose it's likely. If Heady Topper is like any other NEIPA, their chlorides are much higher than their sulfates, and the sulfate level is significantly lower than a typical west coast IPA. So, I'd be interested in knowing exactly what a "metric ton of sulfate added" means exactly, since I highly doubt they're adding 1,000,000 grams of sulfate to each batch.
It's fairly unlikely that they are using SMB to control oxygen ingress, but I suppose it's likely.
...We recommend a 60 minute boil, with a total evaporation of 8 to 10%. This will
most likely look more like a simmer to you than a vigorous boil...
Is it more important to aim for a simmer or an 8 to 10% evaporation rate? It seems to me that the evaporation rate is just a side effect of the simmer.
Be careful not to boil too low. That's not desirable either.
what do you think of the beers?
I'm wondering if this is true. With the empirical and analytical data pointing to the detriments of boiling too hard or intensely and that fact that there are some brewing systems that don't boil at all, I don't know. Reportedly, the Picobrew system only reaches to the 190F to 200F range and its the pump recirculation that provides the roiling.
I do know that the activation energy needed for hop acid isomerization is 185F. Therefore, it would seem that if you are getting any roiling from a typical boil, it may be enough.
I just finished up a Munich Dunkel that was boiled with the kettle lid almost entirely on. It required me to reduce my power setting from my typical 45%, down to 20%. I was still getting a light roiling action and my evaporative losses where down under 10%. Sipping on that beer now, I can attest that there is no DMS in it. So the nearly covered boil was OK with that respect and it was only a 60 min boil and there was a significant Pils malt percentage in the grist.
So, I'm seeing that I don't need to boil the heck out of my wort to produce good beer. I'm just wondering what the lower bound truly is.
I definitely need to account for that extra sulfate added by the SMB. This Dunkel is a little too dry in the finish. It also seems that my bittering level (21 IBU) is just a bit too high to allow the malt to come through well. I do like the flavor. The malt is clean. I used the Weyermann Chocolate Wheat and I'm liking the very light chocolate note, just a hint without roastiness.
This is the first day on carbonation after only a week of somewhat high temperature lagering. It's still too young to render a final verdict. My National palate is putting this beer in the low 30's today.
The lower I take the boil, the more of the fresh malt flavor from the mash sticks around through the boil (and into the finished beer). I also boil with a lid mostly on and a very, very low flame and my evaporation is about 6%. I don't get any DMS.
You should try reducing your evaporation to 6-8%. 8% tastes noticeably better than 10%, and 6% tastes noticeably better than 8%, especially for light lagers.
In this interview, they talk about how Hill Farmstead taking steps to eliminate dissolved oxygen in all parts of the process