Can I ask why tannins are so bad? Bad flavor?
They produce an astringent mouth feel, like sucking on tea bags
Can I ask why tannins are so bad? Bad flavor?
No offense intended, but There is a lot of misinformation in this post and in this thread in general.
Increased temperature has no effect on lautering efficiency whatsoever. The viscosity of the liquid has zero effect on the amount of sugars extracted. Brukaiser proved this both theoretically and experimentally, and the results are on his website. You can sparge/lauter with room temperature water and be just fine.
As far at the fine crush issue: crushing should not produce small husk particles, unless you are actually grinding your grain to flour. The husks will remain mostly in tact even on a grain mills finest setting, which is where I keep mine. Only the endosperm is being crushed.
If you do get a large amount of husks into your boil kettle then yes you could theoretically get some tannins, but that shouldn't happen unless you've done something wrong with your grain treatment.
The reason your hung bag was stickier than your squeezed bag was that your hung bag had time for wort to evaporate off of it leaving sticky sugar behind, while the squeezed bag was still wet. I bet if you took your squeezed bag and put it in a bucket for 30 minutes it would be just as sticky.
They produce an astringent mouth feel, like sucking on tea bags
I didn't mean to portray myself as an expert on any of this, far from it, I was only musing based on my own experiences. I do not wish to spread misinformation. However, I was bringing up the viscosity argument because I use the no-sparge method when I BIAB, and I do believe the viscosity has an effect in that case. Do you not agree?
Oh ok, so the beer would be safe and relatively drinkable? Just kinda bad tasting?
I'm no expert either, but I argued with one on this very subject once [emoji16].. No I don't agree that viscosity affects lautering in no-sparge. I only say that because I lost this argument once when someone showed me the math. I can't remember the math right now, but basically The difference in liquid viscosity between 70F and 170F of 1.070 gravity wort is almost vzero, so it can't have an effect.
Think of the grain like a sponge full of sugar water. Getting it hot doesn't increase the amount of sugar that comes out because the concentration in the solution stays constent.
A dunk sparge can marginally increase efficiency because that would be like wringing out the sponge, then dunking it in regular water and squeezing again. you are basically displacing the sugar in the sponge with water and then forming a weaker solution.
Now if you start to approach the maximum solubility of sugar in water, the temperature will certainly start making a difference, but no beer wort even approaches that level. So the effect of temperature on lautering is absolutely minimal.
I hope I explained that alright, cheers!
I'd be interested in an experiment to gauge total wort recovered by just letting the bag drain for 30 minutes vs squeezing like a mad man.
I have a hunch there is not much gained if any squeezing vs a patient drain of say 30 minutes.
According to the table it appears that a 20% sugar (only sucrose, I know, but it's close) solution at 70F would be roughly 2.5 times more viscous than at 170F.
Can I ask why tannins are so bad? Bad flavor?