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Slightly higher mash temp to compensate for heat loss?

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MrBJones

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If an unheated MT (like a cooler) typically loses three or four degrees over an hour...might there be a benefit to compensating by deliberately aiming for mash temperature a degree or two higher than the recipe calls for?
 
If an unheated MT (like a cooler) typically loses three or four degrees over an hour...might there be a benefit to compensating by deliberately aiming for mash temperature a degree or two higher than the recipe calls for?

Sure. Every recipe is going to have to be adjusted for your system. Try it and see if you like the result.
 
If an unheated MT (like a cooler) typically loses three or four degrees over an hour...might there be a benefit to compensating by deliberately aiming for mash temperature a degree or two higher than the recipe calls for?

I am a little curious about this myself.

I am not convinced that I could tell the difference in a triangle test between the same beer mashed steady at 150F, 152F or 154F (though I might expect a little difference in the FG and ABV). If that is true, then mashing a few degrees higher won't really have much positive impact, but also won't have a negative impact. I also tend to think that the mash temperature for the first 20 minutes or so of the mash has more impact than the rest of the time.

With my 5 gallon batches wrapped in a sleeping bag, I tend to see 1F to 2F drop over a 60 minute mash. With my 2.5 gallon batches I tend to see 4F to 5F drop. The same for some 1 gallon batches I made. Even with that 4F to 5F drop in temps, I don't notice any impact that I could attribute to the drop in mash temps.
 
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