So my LHBS sent me off with a pretty chunky grind on my 11# of grain I purchased today. I asked to pass it through again, and he did. It still came out looking like crap. I have whole kernels mixed in with coarse grind material. I disappointed but it shows me that I need to purchase my own grinder so I can adjust accordingly.
I was wondering if by decocting the mash, if I may break down the husk material enough that I might be able to attain a higher mash efficiency from this grain? I purchased some pH stabilizer in an attempt to allow my lauter phase to (hopefully) go smoother.
9# Vienna
10 oz of Munich, Carapils, carared and C10.
Lager yeast to follow.
I've never had issues with a stuck sparge...but I have had issues with low efficiency due to mash tun dynamics. It's a rectangular coleman with a manifold in the bottom, but it still has a ton of dead space. Probably .5 gallon.
Are there any other steps that I can take to maximize this? I really don't have a problem boiling my anticipated 5 gallon batch down to a 3.5-4 gallon batch in order to hit my numbers. Thanks in advance.
I was wondering if by decocting the mash, if I may break down the husk material enough that I might be able to attain a higher mash efficiency from this grain? I purchased some pH stabilizer in an attempt to allow my lauter phase to (hopefully) go smoother.
9# Vienna
10 oz of Munich, Carapils, carared and C10.
Lager yeast to follow.
I've never had issues with a stuck sparge...but I have had issues with low efficiency due to mash tun dynamics. It's a rectangular coleman with a manifold in the bottom, but it still has a ton of dead space. Probably .5 gallon.
Are there any other steps that I can take to maximize this? I really don't have a problem boiling my anticipated 5 gallon batch down to a 3.5-4 gallon batch in order to hit my numbers. Thanks in advance.