oat milk? Like another soy/almond/rice type deal i assume?
oat milk? Like another soy/almond/rice type deal i assume?
I have been brewing New England styles using a RAW Brew for the past 9 months... always comes out fantastic..
I also thought about pressure cookers, it might be a really good idea. Would surely speed things up.Semi interested in this raw process. Few questions
Is anybody using pressure cooker for hop boil? I dont think it will raise ibu level a whole lot but its definitely faster. Or is the mini-quasi-decoction a better route?
Sounds like whirlfloc is needed to avoid astringency from polyphenols, etc interacting with hop oils? Or no?
Are flaked, carpils/carafoam, etc necessary if the no boil by itself helps with body and mouthfeel?
How difficult to get into typical 6% range with BIAB no boil? Finer crush, very thick mashes, big ass pot?
What sort of ABVs?
So in a sense youre mashing and then batch sparging. Doesnt this lower your OG? And how would you add hops? Id think you would need another pot to do hopstand/whirlpool.... no?
So in a sense youre mashing and then batch sparging. Doesnt this lower your OG? And how would you add hops? Id think you would need another pot to do hopstand/whirlpool.... no?
Ok, so my HBC met yesterday and I brought my two bottles, one boiled and one not. They were not identical, but both tasted good. Actually most of the folks present said they liked the no boil beer better. Also the no boil was significantly clearer. The difference I noticed was it seemed the boil did help everything meld, the no boil seemed like each ingredient was more distinct.
I will definitely be doing more no boil brewing. It is not about the time for me. Usually if I'm brewing I figure about 4 hours from start to finish. Where I may use this is when I'm brewing a partigyle, or small beer after sparging the grains from a bigger beer. Of course I will have to remember I will not have any boil off so the OG coming out of the MT will be the OG. Maybe double the trouble (threads) and ferment with lager yeast at ale temps, just for fun.![]()
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The pumpkin beer went nuts. Fermented over a few days so no issue from warm pitch. I am not surprised about infections with these, see my comments above. I think the wort must enter the fermenter above 140 so it can pasteurize in the fermenter. Or everything that touches it must be cold side sanatized.
Thanks cmac for the findings. It sounds like there was no doughy or fresh wort taste. That is my concern.
The pumpkin beer went nuts. Fermented over a few days so no issue from warm pitch. I am not surprised about infections with these, see my comments above. I think the wort must enter the fermenter above 140 so it can pasteurize in the fermenter. Or everything that touches it must be cold side sanatized.
Thanks cmac for the findings. It sounds like there was no doughy or fresh wort taste. That is my concern.
With no boil almost everything is on the cold side and sanitation needs to be a much higher priority no doubt.![]()
Above 60c, everything gets pasteurised,
No, you're just killing most things. But not everything. Boiling will kill more things, pressure-cooking will kill even more. But even autoclaved media can see the odd fungal spore germinate after a few months.
The 60C thing is just doing a "good enough" job for most purposes, as it's pretty much killing anything that is actively alive (assuming you've not picked up certain weird bacteria from hot springs) but it won't touch many things when they are "hibernating" as a spore.
With no boil almost everything is on the cold side and sanitation needs to be a much higher priority no doubt.![]()
Hahahaha, another accidental lambic in the making?Ohh great, now you tell me! Haha, cheers![]()
Ohh great, now you tell me! Haha, cheers
Since I made that beer I have commented many times on this and it's been racking my brain. I use a bucket colander and lid to squeeze the bag. I'm starting to think the best thing to do is after squeezing the bag and all that, to put the pot back on until it hits 160. Sitting in the bucket no chilling at 160 it will definitely pasteurize everything. Option b is to work quick enough that the beer enters the fermenter above 140ish where it can remain for a half hour. And option c, sanitize everything overly well. I think the easiest thing to do is heat wort before putting in bucket? What are your thoughts?
As I do not have a pot big enough to reheat my wort, I will try to keep everything above 60c. I will mash a bit higher for this... Or maybe I will reheat the wort a bit... Hmmmmmm... Certainly don't want to buy a third fermenter because I got another accident lambic going on....