Whenever I pull a sample from the mash for an iodine test, I always seem to get some grain particles in there, which gives me a false negative for full conversion. How do you all pull samples and test without having particles muddle your test?
@jwelch1103 that sounds like a pretty good technique however I am not sure the grains darkening is really a false positive. I think it is showing that there is still starch available to be converted, only the starch hasn't yet been released into the wort. Yes you could stop here and lauter and not have to worry about unconverted starch in your wort. But if you are leaving starch behind in your husks then you are not reaching 100% conversion efficiency and ultimately brewhouse efficiency will suffer.
If you have a refractometer there is an easy way to test for conversion which depends on knowing the water to grist ratio in your mash and calculating expected specific gravity at 100% conversion. As you approach what you think is the end of the mash start testing the mash wort every 10 minutes until you reach expected gravity at 100% conversion. I find when I use this technique I usually end up doing a longer than expected mash (90 minutes at 151F might be typical on my system) and end up with 5-10% bump in brewhouse efficiency. Possibly this longer mash has other impacts on the beer (increased fermentability or potential for astringency both seem possible in theory) so I tend to use this strategy on bigger beers where my mash tun capacity is being challenged and for smaller beers just take the hit on efficiency and use a bit more grain.
here is the table (under conversion efficiency heading)
http://www.braukaiser.com/wiki/index.php?title=Understanding_Efficiency
For example, if you are mashing at 1.24 qt/lb you are looking to hit 1.096 SG in the mash tun wort before sparging. Need to be careful if you are using Beersmith with the way it calculates mash thickness. Best to check the math yourself and do the division, then look at the table and extrapolate.
Thanks, I will look into this.
When I do an iodine test I don't see evidence of starch, but my efficiency hasn't been very good either. So this looks like something I want to try. But I wonder, with that long a mash, could you end up with lower than expected FG--and higher than expected ABV?
Whenever I pull a sample from the mash for an iodine test, I always seem to get some grain particles in there, which gives me a false negative for full conversion. How do you all pull samples and test without having particles muddle your test?
So I gave the technique a try yesterday....
OK, now I think I understand your point. Had you used an iodine test you may have stopped mashing at say 90 minutes and end up leaving a lot of convertible starch/sugars behind. Is that it?