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Protein rest needed for Roggenbier?

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Dracunculus

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I plan to brew a Roggenbier this weekend, which will use the following grain profile (2.5 gallon batch):

1.5 lb rye malt
1.5 lb 2-row
1.25 lb 60L crystal
1 lb wheat malt

In my reading and searching the forums, I haven't found a good answer as to whether a protein or saccharification rest will be needed based on the 48% rye/wheat contribution to the mash. The current plan is to mash at 153 F for an hour (obviously with BIAB, since I am posting in this forum).

I appreciate any input in advance.
 
It's not necessary, but you'll want to throw in a lot of rice hulls. You will get a stuck sparge if you don't. I did mine with a decoction mash, which wasn't necessary, but I wanted the experience. In the future, I'll skip the decoction, and just add more rice hulls.
 
Good question. I overlooked that in your first post. That, I'm not aware of that since I don't do BIAB. My first thought is that it certainly can't hurt, but might not be necessary. I'll let someone with more experience chime in, though.
 
That looks like about 5.25 pounds of grain total, and 1.25 pounds crystal 60L? Or is that a typo? It's obviously WAY too much crystal malt.

You can do a protein rest if you want, but generally it's so that lautering is easier with lots of rye and what. Since you're doing BIAB, I don't think that is an issue at all. If your grains are malted, you don't need a protein rest.
 
I don't think a protein rest is so necessary but a beta glucan rest would be nice. Both rye and wheat get pretty sticky but since you are doing it BIAB you can still squeeze the wort out. There will be a lot more squeezing needed than with just barley malt.
 
Hmm...I will adjust the amount of Crystal then. Was trying to match color according to Brewers Friend, but I may do that instead by changing the Lovibond rather than the amount.
Thanks for the input.
 
Changed it to 0.5 lbs 60L crystal and added 0.15 lb Chocolate malt for the color. Upped the 2-row to 2 lbs and the rye to 1.6 lbs to keep the OG the same.
 
Thanks for the link. Since I have the grains for my recipe on order already, I will try it out with a future brew (already bookmarked it in Chrome). One of the advantages of a smaller batch size is more frequent brewing.
 

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