torilen
Well-Known Member
Sorry if this has been covered before. What would be the difference between using a malt extract and using malt grains? Flavor difference? Cost efficient difference? Brewing time?
Thanks
Thanks
A modest all-grain set up is a single kettle big enough for your entire mash and a paint strainer bag. Plus a reliable thermometer. Hardly expensive! Of course, most of us want to get fancier, but the point is that a mash setup for AG can be extremely basic. Don't let it be a deterrent. The homebrew world has evolved and simplified beyond giant 3 vessel systems as the de facto option.
My brew days are 3.5-4 hours usually.
Meaning, brewing in a bag (BIAB?)? I could use a little insight, and guidance on this process as well. It all seems pretty confusing to me...I can have an extract (5 gal) batch brewed in about 1.5-2 hrs. Time is a BIG factor in my household!
Even though I believe I did the grain bill properly (and I had good efficiency in the mash process), it's much lighter in color than the extract version. Will that translate to taste? I don't know. I'll see after this weekend when I rack to a keg and start to carbonate it.
I'll bet if you tried a batch where you added melanoidin malt to your mash you could get pretty close to the same color.
When extract is made it has to be concentrated and I think that is where some of the darker colors come from. If you took your first runnings and boiled them a little while before you added your sparge you might also be able to match color. Maybe even the taste of the extract.
Grains that can be steeped are already converted, or are roasted & produce more long-chain sugars for color & flavor. Long-chain sugars can't be metabolized by brewing yeasts.
Man, I love this site.
I just used "normal" grains that I presume wouldn't have been converted or roasted.
I anticipate this beer will be good (I hope so!) but I'm not convinced that it will have similar flavor. Among the reasons, the steeping grains.
Exactly what are you considering " normal"? There are roasted grains, just for color. Then crystal/caramelized grains for color & flavor. Then base malts with high diastatic power for converting starches to sugars. Those are the basics, anyway...