21jason21
Well-Known Member
If the starch contains any amylopectin, then it will not convert to 100% fermentable sugar, as the branches in the amylopectin will result in dextrins in the resulting extract.
Assuming the starch is 100% starch (no proteins, moisture, etc.) 1 lb of starch will create about 1.055 lb of sugar + dextrins. This is due to the water that combines with the starch during hydrolysis. So, the potential for pure starch will be about 46 pts/lb * 1.055 = 48.5 pts/lb, or written as SG 1.0485.
So the big question is: how pure is the starch.
Edit: Quick Google search turned up the following:
"wheat starch contains ~98% carbohydrates (starch), 0.8–1.0% lipids, 0.2–0.5% proteins and 0.2–0.3% ash (moisture-free basis). ... Wheat starch is produced by physical separation from nonstarch constituents.
Wheat starch production, structure, functionality ... - Wiley Online Library"
This would change the dry basis potential calculation to:
46 pts/lb * 1.055 * 0.98 = 47.6 pts/lb, or 1.0476Brew on![]()
I currently have the cornstarch at 1.038, I will change it to 1.048.