The only real science being done today is called "engineering" anyway. Good enough is always good enough.
We're gravity readings done by a hydrometer, or refractometer?I measured a preboil of 1.039 on the wort coming out of the recirc (which is what was predicted) but I never remeasured the cloudy wort post bag squeeze to see if it picked up any more gravity. I suppose that came from the fact that I've tested this many times in the past and always saw the same gravity.
At the end of the boil, in fact the reason I had those small cups of wort to compare, I tested the OGs.. The two clean boil samples were 1.048 and the two dirty boil samples were 1.049 and 1.050. This either means squeezing the bag AND/OR the extra 5 minutes of mashout time raised the gravity or it was just a coincidental variation in boiloff rates.
I'll choose my words carefully, but - I really think it does. My readings change, and the line is sharper, if I let my mash sample sit for a few minutes first. I'm not talking about it cooling, but I can see those particles settle out. The readings change and the line is sharper.While optical refractometer reading, which measures sugar from refraction angle, I guess wouldn't be affected by solids.
Easydens.We're gravity readings done by a hydrometer, or refractometer?
Having suspended solids, could increase actual density (as measured by hydrometer). While optical refractometer reading, which measures sugar from refraction angle, I guess wouldn't be affected by solids.
Yeah, it's really strange stuff. I think that's one thing I said to the group directly following the tasting. Since it was done with Google forms, I saw the trend right away and said, it looks like putting trub into the fermenter is pretty important. The two "clean" ferment samples couldn't catch up in clarity even after 5 weeks in the cold.It's interesting that the dirty boil, dirty ferment, scored slightly better than the clean boil, clean ferment. It also appears that a dirty ferment "fixes" a lot of whatever the detrimental effects of a dirty boil are. It also supports the idea that if you are not putting clean beer in the boil (like a lot of BIABers), you should definitely put some boil trub in the fermenter.
It's also interesting that your results align with the much maligned Brulosophy Exbeeriment showing a net benefit of trub in the fermenter when it comes to finished beer clarity, and subtle differences in taste with some tasters preferring the high trub beer, and some preferring the low.
Brew on![]()
Admittedly, I took samples and measurements far fewer times than I wanted to. I'm lucky I got the 12 and 24 hour pictures.One curiosity I have as the owner of something like 8+ RAPT pills at this point would be the fermentation kinetics. In my experience, both excessive lag times and slow ferments (at any stage) are both independently attributable to an unhealthy fermentation. I would have liked to drop a pill into each fermentor and see what the profiles looked like. Floating hydrometers are poor at absolute measurements of original and final gravity, but they are very good at identifying the different phases of yeast growth, their duration, and slope. I pay attention to these in my fermentations as it tells me whether my pitch rate and fermentation temperatures are appropriate.
No one noted tannins in the general comments on the form or in person following the tasting. This is likely due to the mash pH being 5.3ish across the board. In my humble opinion, I think A was clearly flawed. It was the only one out of the four that I wouldn't drink a pint of.Another curiosity I would have as someone that is sensitive to tannins (as mouthfeel) would be whether the bag squeeze samples were worse. Was it a poll option in your survey, or did anyone comment on it at the meet? Personally, I have never had tannin issues from bag squeezing, only from using rice hulls and 'non-dehusked' roasted malts.
Sample | Aggregate of comments |
A | Diacetyl, This was my favorite, Something off with this not sure what, This does not taste good, diacetyl, too sweet. |
B | Clean and Crisp, Acetaldehyde, Hop character highest in this one. |
C | Low DMS. This is best |
D | Cleanest. This tastes the best |
Yeah, I'm speculating that you'd want to whirlpool and settle for a short time for the heavier hop particles to be rejected but you wouldn't want to wait like 30-40 minutes for EVERYTHING to settle out.I do not have anything but a borderline useless anecdote/speculation to add to this thread. I tend to brew with strains are known to produce more H2S than other strains, including Kolsch, Witbier, Hefeweizen, Augustiner Lager, etc. Some of these I have brewed more than once, and I have observed that a phase I went through obsessing over trub exclusion going into the fermentor anecdotally* (take with several grains of salt) led some of my most "farty" beers. Excluding trub should not, on paper, limit the amount of solubilized cysteine and methionine in the wort from mashing, so I am not sure what in the trub is having the beneficial effect on yeast nutrition and mitigation of this off-flavor, but I have switched to whirlpooling and resting a short time such that a certain 'non-zero' amount of trub makes it into my fermentor, and it seems to result in healthier fermentations coupled with the use of yeast nutrient.
Don't know about that. My impression from years of reading HBT is that the consensus "best process", pushed by many, was clean boil, clean ferment, which came in third here.What struck me most, is that what won out was the current best practice pushed on this forum when I started brewing (about 15 years ago). Way before biab. I (like everyone, it seems like) used 3 vessels with a focus on wort clarity in the vorlauf, then dumped everything but the hops into the fermenters.
Yeah, I'm speculating that you'd want to whirlpool and settle for a short time for the heavier hop particles to be rejected but you wouldn't want to wait like 30-40 minutes for EVERYTHING to settle out.
Since returning to the hobby almost 2 years ago, with no equipment, I have been biab. The thing I love about it the most is the short brew sessions. I hate to think about opening up my crush--it would add a half hour.
On the other hand, I already use a hlt. I have been thinking about a 2 vessel. This might nudge a reasonable man who isn't completely happy with biab in that direction.
Oh, I agree 100%. I'm just always thinking about what I might change on my baling wire and duct tape setup if I ever get a chance. I've made very good beer with a wilser bag and almost nothing. Something about the aesthetic of the semi-consumable synthetic fiber bag has never inspired me, despite its utter functionality.For all the benefits I believe eBIAB has, and there are many, the one pushback that always gave me some pause was the fines in the boil thing. I certainly do not consider this experiment to be conclusive evidence that all BIAB wort is inferior to 3-vessel wort. At best, I'd say there is evidence that there is an upper threshold of mash fines concentration in the boil that seems to be detrimental. Based on evidence of outstanding beers being produced by the BIAB method, I think that many brewers using the method are operating below the threshold. I will likely repeat this fact many times in the ongoing discussion just to be sure people see it and feel it, but the amount of fines in these boils was at least TWICE as much as the average batch.
Great experiment.The video is up. I ended up calling this experiment #1 because I never really published any data on the first one and I kind of screwed it up anyway.
There was some discussion way up in this thread about the pros and cons of taking the visual away from the tasting. If the focus was only flavor, that would make sense but everyone drinks beer in clear glasses. How does process affect the beer in the glass with all things considered? I'm not suggesting that the clear vs hazy appearance didn't affect the overall rating. It probably did, because it generally does. I have enough of the beer left to have all the club's judges taste them blind next month and I'll publish that data when it happens.Great experiment.
It would be cool to see an overall ranking done in opaque cups. I wonder how much the clarity of D pushed it up its Overall scores. Did you happen to try these in opaque cups? Do you think you could tell differences by taste or aroma alone?