madscientist451
Well-Known Member
That's a pretty high mash temp, will be looking forward to hearing about how it turns out.
The murky part sounds like a lot of starches were left in the finished wort. A way to getting them to floc is to simply boil some more. As for your lack of sweetness, what was your cold wort volume?Got 80% mash efficiency and the weirdest wort I've ever produced: thick, murky and completely devoid of sweetness, 1.033 OG to fermenter.
As for your lack of sweetness, what was your cold wort volume?
Because 1.033 in 5ls tastes very different from 1.033 in 20ls.![]()
Sorry for not being clear.Huh?
I hope that clears it out.
Huh?
The cold wort volume was 5 L, but I'm comparing its taste to the taste of worts of exactly the same gravity and volume - f. ex. a 5L batch of 1.033 Grätzer I brewed just recently, a 6L batch of 1.032 Grisette I made in autumn, or a 5L batch of 1.032 English Mild of the last spring. Being thin, they weren't particularly sweet either, but this one is significantly less sweet than those three worts.The murky part sounds like a lot of starches were left in the finished wort. A way to getting them to floc is to simply boil some more. As for your lack of sweetness, what was your cold wort volume?
Because 1.033 in 5ls tastes very different from 1.033 in 20ls.![]()
I would give your fermenting wort a taste. See if some funky bugs decided to live in it and if the raw wort flavour has gone away. Because if it hasn't the yeasts are probably experiencing a hard time fermenting the wort as it stays very dense as they move around in it.The cold wort volume was 5 L, but I'm comparing its taste to the taste of worts of exactly the same gravity and volume - f. ex. a 5L batch of 1.033 Grätzer I brewed just recently, a 6L batch of 1.032 Grisette I made in autumn, or a 5L batch of 1.032 English Mild of the last spring. Being thin, they weren't particularly sweet either, but this one is significantly less sweet than those three worts.
Currently I'm somewhat concerned about that after a week in primary the beer still shows signs of active fermentation (the yeast is M10 Workhorse, a strain close to S-33). My other extra-low-gravity beers usualy calm down at the day 3 or 4. Knowing that this kind of low-gravity starchy wort is particularly succeptible to infection, I went nuclear with sanitation, using peroxyacetic solution. I don't dare to open and check gravity to not introduce airborne bugs.
It has some hint of a flavour completely new to me, I'd call it "rustic", "wood-like" or "hay-like", it's not unpleasant and I think it's the flavour of unconverted starches (the beer is still murky and opaque).