smyrnaquince
Well-Known Member
When a quantity like 1.5 quarts of water per pound of grain is quoted for a mash, is that total water used for the mash or do I have to add in extra water to allow for what will be absorbed by the grains?
It should be x quarts per pound in the mash, and you don't compensate extra for deadspace or anything else. The whole concept of quarts per pound is the relationship to the amount of water being used during the mashing process, not anything else, so don't compensate for anything else.
Example: if you're shooting for 1.5 quarts per pound in your mash and you have a 10 pound grain bill, you should be using 15 quarts of water in your mash. "But what if I have a .25 gallon deadspace?" That's irrelevant. You're not looking for a 1.5 quarts per pound ratio in your boil kettle.
Honestly I didn't read all these long responses but I don't see the grain absorption rate figured into any of the equations. You'll lose .13 gallons per lb of grain to absorption....
10lbs grain x .13 = 1.3 gallons lost to absorption in the mash that won't run out to the kettle. Add that number back into your sparge water to make up the loss.
It's in the third response.Gitmoe said:Honestly I didn't read all these long responses but I don't see the grain absorption rate figured into any of the equations.
I agree with most of what you said, but not the deadspace issue. There are circumstances where the deadspace may be as great as 1+ gallons. Mashing a small grainbill would yield unpredictable results if you did not account for this deadspace, not to mention that you'd be stirring something like mason's mortar with how thick it would be.
Example)
English Mild 5Gallon
7.25 lbs grainbill
1.25:1 ratio
1 gallon deadspace
7.25*1.25 = 9.06 quarts (2.26 gallons)
If I put 2.26 gallons in my MLT I will only have 1.26 gallons above the false bottom for the grain to mix with creating an effective ratio of grist to water of 0.70:1 - a big difference from 1.25:1. So, yes, you DO need to know your deadspace and how you will account for it in certain circumstances.
THIS... I have a 2 gallon space under my false bottom. I like the mash thickness of 1.33 Qts. per Lb. so I fill the MLT just to the false bottom then figure for 1.33 Qts. Per Lb. For an average 11 Gallon batch with 16 Lbs. of grain it ends up being around 1.67 Qts. per Lb. I only make 10 gallon batches but if I were to do an average ABV 5 gallon batch, I think the mash might be too thin at that ratio.If you have a 10 gallon mash tun with a 3 gallon deadspace, you think that you should add an extra three gallons to the mash? That would severely affect the emzymatic action of the mash. Are you saying that the volume of water below your false bottom isn't contributing anything to the mash, emzyme-wise? I would disagree.
My thinking is that the thin portion of the mash below a false bottom or in a RIMS tube contains enzymes, but not starches. As long as there are plenty of enzymes in the thick mash, you will get conversion there, but the "thickness" of the mash is only measured where liquid and grain are together.Just because that water isn't in contact directly with the grains it is in contact with the water that is and the enzymes being leached from the grain into said water are there whether the grains are or aren't.
JustLooking said:My thinking is that the thin portion of the mash below a false bottom or in a RIMS tube contains enzymes, but not starches. As long as there are plenty of enzymes in the thick mash, you will get conversion there, but the "thickness" of the mash is only measured where liquid and grain are together.