bobbytuck
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There's a great article in the most recent BYO magazine about no-sparge brewing. I know this has been discussed to death here -- no-sparge, fly, batch, hybrid -- but a couple points in the article peaked my interest:
- The author talks about how *decreasing* efficiency actually made his session beers taste better. He mentions how his efficient 80-85% beers were sometimes watery -- thin -- and that thanks to some emails with Jamil, the author realized that perhaps his efficiency was too high -- so he aimed for a 70% instead of 85% efficiency. The result, wrote the author, was a malty taste and smell similar to grain straight out of the bag -- intense, rich, fresh.
- The way he did achieved this strong malt presence was by *increasing* the mash thickness to 2.5+ quarts per pound (as opposed to the normal 1.2 to 1.5) and essentially mashing with all the water necessary for his pre-boil (7.25 gallons ). In other words, he used 12 pounds of grain in a 9+ gallon mash to get his 7.25 pre-boil/5.5 post-boil (figuring in grain absorption and MLT dead space). He skipped the sparge entirely.
I'm doing a Winter Warmer tomorrow and plan on giving this a try. I've got 14.75 pounds of grain -- 2-row and a little bit of C60 with 5% cherrywood smoked malt. I may also throw a little bit of special roast. So I'll probably have 15 pounds total. If I'd mash at 154F with my normal 1.75quarts per pound -- and with my usual 80-85% efficiency and 60 min fly sparge -- I should get a OG (post-boil) of 1.075 .
With the no-sparge method, I'll mash with 9.6 gallons of water and -- from what I understand -- will most likely get about 65-70% efficiency. I'm hoping to get 1.048 post-boil or so from the mash. Not exactly a Winter Warmer style-wise -- at least based on the result I should get from the no-sparge -- but I'm hoping it'll be a decent session beer with a good, strong malt presence. My MLT is a 15 gallon blichmann, so I should be fine in terms of MLT size.
I'll report my results here, but I'm curious if anyone does this no-sparge/thin mash regularly. I'll mash for 90 mins (my usual) but I'm guessing I won't need the entire time (thereby cutting not only the sparge out of my brewday but also part of the mash -- maybe saving upwards of 60-75 minutes or so from my usual 7.5 hours).
A benefit here -- and one that I'm really curious to see -- is that I can measure the pre-boil OG directly from the mash (in addition to my measuring and adjusting the pH).
Anyway, any comments? Suggestions? Warnings?
(Obviously, I can increase my grain bill by 1/3 to account for the no-sparge and hit the original OG. But I'm not able to get the grain in time, so I'll just take the hit in efficiency, change the style a bit, and see what happens.)
- The author talks about how *decreasing* efficiency actually made his session beers taste better. He mentions how his efficient 80-85% beers were sometimes watery -- thin -- and that thanks to some emails with Jamil, the author realized that perhaps his efficiency was too high -- so he aimed for a 70% instead of 85% efficiency. The result, wrote the author, was a malty taste and smell similar to grain straight out of the bag -- intense, rich, fresh.
- The way he did achieved this strong malt presence was by *increasing* the mash thickness to 2.5+ quarts per pound (as opposed to the normal 1.2 to 1.5) and essentially mashing with all the water necessary for his pre-boil (7.25 gallons ). In other words, he used 12 pounds of grain in a 9+ gallon mash to get his 7.25 pre-boil/5.5 post-boil (figuring in grain absorption and MLT dead space). He skipped the sparge entirely.
I'm doing a Winter Warmer tomorrow and plan on giving this a try. I've got 14.75 pounds of grain -- 2-row and a little bit of C60 with 5% cherrywood smoked malt. I may also throw a little bit of special roast. So I'll probably have 15 pounds total. If I'd mash at 154F with my normal 1.75quarts per pound -- and with my usual 80-85% efficiency and 60 min fly sparge -- I should get a OG (post-boil) of 1.075 .
With the no-sparge method, I'll mash with 9.6 gallons of water and -- from what I understand -- will most likely get about 65-70% efficiency. I'm hoping to get 1.048 post-boil or so from the mash. Not exactly a Winter Warmer style-wise -- at least based on the result I should get from the no-sparge -- but I'm hoping it'll be a decent session beer with a good, strong malt presence. My MLT is a 15 gallon blichmann, so I should be fine in terms of MLT size.
I'll report my results here, but I'm curious if anyone does this no-sparge/thin mash regularly. I'll mash for 90 mins (my usual) but I'm guessing I won't need the entire time (thereby cutting not only the sparge out of my brewday but also part of the mash -- maybe saving upwards of 60-75 minutes or so from my usual 7.5 hours).
A benefit here -- and one that I'm really curious to see -- is that I can measure the pre-boil OG directly from the mash (in addition to my measuring and adjusting the pH).
Anyway, any comments? Suggestions? Warnings?
(Obviously, I can increase my grain bill by 1/3 to account for the no-sparge and hit the original OG. But I'm not able to get the grain in time, so I'll just take the hit in efficiency, change the style a bit, and see what happens.)