jkarp
Well-Known Member
James Spencer had a podcast not too long ago with some scientist, where they experimented to try and determine maximum IBU content. The maximum they were able to measure, in a very simple beer, was ~60IBUs
Basic Brewing also did a collaborative experiment with BYO on partial vs full boil worts on March 4th, 2010. They had the actual finished beer IBUs lab tested and found very little difference in IBU utilization, even after diluting the partial boil wort by 50%.
Full pre-boil gravity: 1.068; OG 1.076; IBUs 66
Partial pre-boil gravity: 1.127; OG 1.070; IBUs 61
This pretty well blows a hole in the "100 max IBU theory" as this partial boil must have had well over 122 IBUs in solution after boil. Considerably more in fact, when you consider that yeast pull significant amounts of iso-alpha acids out of solution during fermentation.
This all begins to make sense when one listens to this excellent interview with John Palmer from back in 2008. I believe the homebrewer's 100 max IBU theory actually came from the work of Malowicki and Shellhammer who established that that the maximum solubility of alpha acids in beer is about 90 mg/L. After listening to Palmer's interview however, one will discover that 1 IBU is not equal to 1 mg/L of iso-alpha acid as many homebrewers still believe.
So what is the IBU limit of wort? It's clearly higher than 100, based on the empirical evidence alone. It would make an interesting experiment (master's thesis?) for someone with access to the appropriate lab equipment...