applescrap
Be the ball!
2 hours and 20 minutes start to finish here is the brew log. 45-minute mash but extended cuz I stirred it. And 45 minutes boil no chill in kettle

2 hours and 20 minutes start to finish here is the brew log. 45-minute mash but extended cuz I stirred it. And 45 minutes boil no chill in kettle
Very quick alright! You might, though, want to take a look at the most recent Beersmith podcast. Charlie Bamforth talks about the need for a vigorous 60 to 90 minute boil to drive off flavors associated with DMS. Just a thought.
I do a slow rolling boil for 30 minutes without DMS as do several others. Perhaps Charlie is overstating the likelihood of DMS.
There are probably a number of variables invoved, most of which I don't understand. When Charlie talks, I listen. Your process is working for you though, so it's hard to argue against that.
This article from Marshall over at brulosophy might be of interested to you.
I've never experienced DMS and have done 30 min boils rather often. Modern malsters are pretty awesome.
Threw the 6 oz. In it was a lot!
Thank you for posting wisc
For such an archaic and common beverage it never ceases to amaze me how dogmatic people are. I have no idea who charlie is but he is spouting garbage. Most of this dogmatic idealism has basis only in theory not actuality yet arrogantly people pontificate the virtues of high mash vs low mash temp, boil times etc...yet in blind taste tests they couldnt tell the difference between a 148 and 160 degree mash. I am SO GLAD i saw the light before i bought a pump to recirculate.
Marshall is an amazing and awesome nice guy who would never make the claims i am doing with his data. I am making the claims based on his data, real life experience and well just common sense. 30 minutes is a long time for something to boil what could possibly live through that.
So for thousands of years all the people that ever brewed Homebrew without hydrometers and thermometers were all hacks and didn't know what they were doing? Bet your ass the women of yore could Brew.
I disagree,
Telling people they need to mash at this and that temp, or that they need to boil for x number of minutes is not helpful information to homebrewers. We are talking homebrew not commercial, needlessly wasting time and or money to create something that requires neither is not helpful imo.
1 SMM to DMS conversion is not the same as a living organism. You also have to realize that he has a very good wort chiller, and that may be a contributing variable for the lack of detectable DMS
2 Correct. Marshall would never say he has proven anything besides the fact that a group of people were not able to taste any differences.
3 You're trying to refute a brewing professor and the tons of research he's undoubtedly read and written with a couple of anecdotes. That's just not how progress works. If you want to further the spread of modern brewing techniques, then do so. Run some triangle tests of your own, do testing, build a data set.
4 I've done 15 minute, 20, 25, 30 etc etc minute mashes up to 90 minutes. Conversion and specific gravity continues to increase for most mash conditions beyond 30 minutes. My standard is 45 minimum. I could definitely taste the difference between the 15 minute mash and a 30 minute mash. Yes most of the conversion had occurred, but gravity did not plateu. There was still starch present, and it was highly dextrinous. Not even @rm-mn the paragon of short mashes does 15 minutes anymore from what I remember.
5 Yes, but often times the beer they made was infected, had short shelf life, was inconsistent in the perspective of modern brewing, and until recently they did not understand WHY they did what they did. Did they make beer? Yes, without a doubt. Were they able to consistently hit their target flavor profile, or og? Not really, but they didn't have anyway to measure or describe it, and didn't really care to.
6 That's totally cool for you, a easy brewing mindset is completely fine. Most people here want to have some sort of consistency and predictability in their brews, and that requires knowledge and measurements. Mash temp determines fermentability and mouthfeel.
1 by mentioning chilling are you implying that people that no chill could
2 I am not Marshall and I believe he is a much gentler Soul than me and if I was in his shoes I might make the same claims to avoid conflict. As you are disputing professors and pretty much the vast majority of Brewers. As it stands I don't fear conflict and welcome the chance for Brewing discourse. Based on facts test and scientific examples.
3 I am spreading modern Brewing techniques here on this forum. I don't need to do the research others are doing it for me, furthermore I am moving forward by experimenting on my own and trying new techniques. Most of the dialogue I have read and had with people has left me to believe that very few people try anything new or change what they are doing.
5 do you have some links to historical Brewing data. I will look for it myself. I believe the beer they made was good but that is just a hunch. Are the monks renowned for Brewing all these years just coming into good beer ? I've never infected a batch have you? If it was so easy to do I would have done it by now. Correct me if I'm wrong there are people who believe you don't even need to sanitize and have proven it well at least anecdotally.
6 the old predictability and consistency statement. So if I mash one beer at 155 and one at 152 there will be a difference? And not only that the difference will be so great that I need to buy a bunch of expensive equipment to make sure that I maintain an exact temperature for consistency I'm not buying that.
People still today as I said still think Brewing in bag is not Brewing. Many still think that a a mash needs to be thick to be good. These are my thoughts for now and I reserve the right to reconsider my considering and I'm grateful for the discourse
Agreed a filter is a filter.
A final thought the last stout I brewed had chocolate coffee and oatmeal in it and it would be hard to taste much past that especially because the chocolate is oily
SMM to DMS conversion is not the same as a living organism. You also have to realize that he has a very good wort chiller, and that may be a contributing variable for the lack of detectable DMS
Correct. Marshall would never say he has proven anything besides the fact that a group of people were not able to taste any differences.
You're trying to refute a brewing professor and the tons of research he's undoubtedly read and written with a couple of anecdotes. That's just not how progress works. If you want to further the spread of modern brewing techniques, then do so. Run some triangle tests of your own, do testing, build a data set.
I've done 15 minute, 20, 25, 30 etc etc minute mashes up to 90 minutes. Conversion and specific gravity continues to increase for most mash conditions beyond 30 minutes. My standard is 45 minimum. I could definitely taste the difference between the 15 minute mash and a 30 minute mash. Yes most of the conversion had occurred, but gravity did not plateu. There was still starch present, and it was highly dextrinous. Not even @rm-mn the paragon of short mashes does 15 minutes anymore from what I remember.
Yes, but often times the beer they made was infected, had short shelf life, was inconsistent in the perspective of modern brewing, and until recently they did not understand WHY they did what they did. Did they make beer? Yes, without a doubt. Were they able to consistently hit their target flavor profile, or og? Not really, but they didn't have anyway to measure or describe it, and didn't really care to.
That's totally cool for you, a easy brewing mindset is completely fine. Most people here want to have some sort of consistency and predictability in their brews, and that requires knowledge and measurements. Mash temp determines fermentability and mouthfeel.
This article from Marshall over at brulosophy might be of interested to you.
I've never experienced DMS and have done 30 min boils rather often. Modern malsters are pretty awesome.