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- Dec 27, 2019
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Greetings all...great forum for information.
I looked at other threads regarding pH and tannins, but just want to make sure I'm reasoning this out correctly. So please don't flame me.
I'm new to brewing and jumped in with both feet. I purchased a 5 gallon Ss Brewtech electric brewing system along with two 7 gallon unitanks that have the full (heat & cool) FTS system. For cooling I added a glycol chiller.
I was brewing the Irish Red recipe found in this forum. I was distracted while trying to set the rate of wort flow from MT to BK and the sparge rate from HLT to MT which caused me to put too much sparge water in the BK. Should have been 5.75 gallons in BK, but I had about 7 gallons.
My solution was to boil the wort down to the 5 gallons batch size. When I checked the wort pH and OG (at ~20ºC), it was 5.2 and 1.06 (target OG was 1.059). I should also add that my sparge water was at 170ºF.
Does this indicate that I shouldn't have drawn off any more tannins than normal?
I looked at other threads regarding pH and tannins, but just want to make sure I'm reasoning this out correctly. So please don't flame me.
I'm new to brewing and jumped in with both feet. I purchased a 5 gallon Ss Brewtech electric brewing system along with two 7 gallon unitanks that have the full (heat & cool) FTS system. For cooling I added a glycol chiller.
I was brewing the Irish Red recipe found in this forum. I was distracted while trying to set the rate of wort flow from MT to BK and the sparge rate from HLT to MT which caused me to put too much sparge water in the BK. Should have been 5.75 gallons in BK, but I had about 7 gallons.
My solution was to boil the wort down to the 5 gallons batch size. When I checked the wort pH and OG (at ~20ºC), it was 5.2 and 1.06 (target OG was 1.059). I should also add that my sparge water was at 170ºF.
Does this indicate that I shouldn't have drawn off any more tannins than normal?