Nope. I have no idea what everyone does. Just that it's an option.everyone
Frankly, given that you're not getting much of anything from continued sparging past 1.010 - 1.008, it's almost the same as adding water to the kettle.
Nope. I have no idea what everyone does. Just that it's an option.everyone
Plus the tannins and silicates that you leach from the grain. Oversparging can be quite damaging to your beer. While the lore is that keeping sparging water pH lower than 6 and cooler than 170F will keep you from leaching those components, I find that the most important thing is to avoid reducing the wort gravity within the mash bed to less than about 3 or 4 brix. There is a nice figure in Malting and Brewing Science showing the tendency to extract tannins is directly proportional to the reduction in runoff wort gravity. Don't do it!
Monitor your runoff gravity very closely and avoid filling the tun with too much sparging water. If you need to top of the pre-boil kettle volume, add the sparging water directly to the kettle and don't run it through the mash bed. That technique has corrected my one-time tannin problems.
That's an interesting quote. If Martin says that, who am I do disagree? (Nobody, that's who!)
I will also accept Martin's info on tannin & silicate extraction over anything I may have said.That's an interesting quote. If Martin says that, who am I do disagree? (Nobody, that's who!)
I do find it curious on a chemical level.
Single batch sparging will usually avoid over-sparging issues, but multiple batch sparges can over-sparge low OG beers (less than about 1.045.)I suppose just batch sparging is one way to avoid it all.
Repeating in my head "adding water isn't cheating, adding water isn't cheating"...... repeat!
Single batch sparging will usually avoid over-sparging issues, but multiple batch sparges can over-sparge low OG beers (less than about 1.045.)
For extremely low OG beers (less than about 1.030 OG) a single batch sparge can get into over-sparge territory.
You can use my batch sparge simulator for your specific conditions to predict what your final runnings gravity should be. To use the spreadsheet, download as either an Excel or LibreOffice spreadsheet, and use it locally on your computer.
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