tyrub42
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2016
- Messages
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Hi everyone!
Just wondering if you typically get lower attenuation with Red X. I've brewed with it quite a bit from 10-80 percent of my grist and never noticed much impact on attenuation, but I just did a SMASH beer with it, and I'm surprised by the attenuation. OG was 1.052 and it's looking like it'll finish at 1.015 for 70 percent attenuation. That may not seem bad, but this brew day included two batches splitting the same vitality starter of yeast slurry(a mix of mostly Conan with a bit of Nottingham), and the other batch was a NEDIPA with lots of oats and wheat, and that got 82 percent attenuation.
I did mash the Red X beer a bit higher (about 154, whereas the DIPA was about 151), but that alone shouldn't have resulted in that much of a difference, especially given the DIPA's higher gravity and all the oats in it.
Anyway, the beer is tasting great and I'm very happy with the overall flavor, but I wanted to see how common this was, and what other people's experience was. This was both my first single malt red x, and my first red X beer mashed this high. Aside from that, both beers were made at the same time, used the same yeast from the same starter, got the same nutrients and aeration method, and fermented at the same temp.
Thanks!
Tyler
Just wondering if you typically get lower attenuation with Red X. I've brewed with it quite a bit from 10-80 percent of my grist and never noticed much impact on attenuation, but I just did a SMASH beer with it, and I'm surprised by the attenuation. OG was 1.052 and it's looking like it'll finish at 1.015 for 70 percent attenuation. That may not seem bad, but this brew day included two batches splitting the same vitality starter of yeast slurry(a mix of mostly Conan with a bit of Nottingham), and the other batch was a NEDIPA with lots of oats and wheat, and that got 82 percent attenuation.
I did mash the Red X beer a bit higher (about 154, whereas the DIPA was about 151), but that alone shouldn't have resulted in that much of a difference, especially given the DIPA's higher gravity and all the oats in it.
Anyway, the beer is tasting great and I'm very happy with the overall flavor, but I wanted to see how common this was, and what other people's experience was. This was both my first single malt red x, and my first red X beer mashed this high. Aside from that, both beers were made at the same time, used the same yeast from the same starter, got the same nutrients and aeration method, and fermented at the same temp.
Thanks!
Tyler