lobsterback
Member
I'm four 5 gallon batches into brewing, and each has turned out with the same strong, mostly offputting grainy taste and waxy, chalky texture left on the tounge for long after tasting. The initial mouthfeel and hop tastes are good, but the end and aftertaste always seem heavy, dark, and almost burnt with the texture I described above.
My setup is a 10 gal aluminum pot, Wilserbrewer polyester voile bag, heated on my gas stove (apartment, so no propane burner). It takes me about 50 mins to heat from 110F tap water supply to about 160 for mash in, and another 60 or so to get to a boil. The boil is continuous, but fairly weak as it looks like a roiling boil only in a 4inch square section of the pot.
From what I've read this sounds like a case of high tannin extraction. I plan to cease double milling grain. I also purchased a cheap 1000 W water bucket heater to submerse in the wort to bring it to a boil quicker, and hold a more vigorous boil.
I see a considerable amount of "flour" in the bottom of my kettle, probably 3/4" height of a dense phase that I leave in kettle (14 inch diameter kettle). I haven't read much about BIAB brewers needing to take any steps to filter or sparge their wort prior to the boil, to remove these fines that (from what I recall reading) have more potential for tannin extraction (due to high surface area/volume ratio?) during the boil.
What things should I consider for my next brew? Am I on track suspecting tannins?
Thanks all in advance.
For reference:
Brew 1: Lil' Sparky's Nut Brown mashed at 152F for 75 mins. No water treatment, just raw Pacific Northwest soft tapwater. Grain milled once.
Brew 2: Same recipe as above with a little modification, mashed at 154 for 75 mins. Grain double milled.
Water actively managed: 70 ppm Ca, 2 ppm Mg, 8 ppm Na, 0 ppm SO4, 117 ppm Cl, 15 ppm HCO3
Brew 3: All marris otter pale ale with willamette and fuggles.
Water in ppm: 75.2 Ca, 13.2 Mg, 8.0 Na 31.7 Cl, 170.5 SO4
pH measured on friend's pH probe: 5.65 - too high?
Brew 4: 10 lbs 2 row, 1 lb Caramunich, 8 oz Victory. Magnum 60min, Cascade and Citra flameout and dryhop
Water final, pH not measured:
Ca+2 Mg+2 Na+ Cl- SO4-2
80.5 16.5 8.0 36.2 190.3
My setup is a 10 gal aluminum pot, Wilserbrewer polyester voile bag, heated on my gas stove (apartment, so no propane burner). It takes me about 50 mins to heat from 110F tap water supply to about 160 for mash in, and another 60 or so to get to a boil. The boil is continuous, but fairly weak as it looks like a roiling boil only in a 4inch square section of the pot.
From what I've read this sounds like a case of high tannin extraction. I plan to cease double milling grain. I also purchased a cheap 1000 W water bucket heater to submerse in the wort to bring it to a boil quicker, and hold a more vigorous boil.
I see a considerable amount of "flour" in the bottom of my kettle, probably 3/4" height of a dense phase that I leave in kettle (14 inch diameter kettle). I haven't read much about BIAB brewers needing to take any steps to filter or sparge their wort prior to the boil, to remove these fines that (from what I recall reading) have more potential for tannin extraction (due to high surface area/volume ratio?) during the boil.
What things should I consider for my next brew? Am I on track suspecting tannins?
Thanks all in advance.
For reference:
Brew 1: Lil' Sparky's Nut Brown mashed at 152F for 75 mins. No water treatment, just raw Pacific Northwest soft tapwater. Grain milled once.
Brew 2: Same recipe as above with a little modification, mashed at 154 for 75 mins. Grain double milled.
Water actively managed: 70 ppm Ca, 2 ppm Mg, 8 ppm Na, 0 ppm SO4, 117 ppm Cl, 15 ppm HCO3
Brew 3: All marris otter pale ale with willamette and fuggles.
Water in ppm: 75.2 Ca, 13.2 Mg, 8.0 Na 31.7 Cl, 170.5 SO4
pH measured on friend's pH probe: 5.65 - too high?
Brew 4: 10 lbs 2 row, 1 lb Caramunich, 8 oz Victory. Magnum 60min, Cascade and Citra flameout and dryhop
Water final, pH not measured:
Ca+2 Mg+2 Na+ Cl- SO4-2
80.5 16.5 8.0 36.2 190.3