hlmbrwng
Well-Known Member
I brewed my first all-grain batch yesterday, after about 5 months of planning and researching.. Well, it was ideally all-grain, but the efficiency was pretty damn low (couldn't calculate it exactly) and so had to add some light dried extract at the end of boil to reclaim some gravity.
I believe that the mash pH my have been too high. Possibly up to 6.1, but issue was that my pH meter, which I though was calibrated, was not. So this is guess. After all the research I did, I slacked on the pH. I figured with all the dark specialty grains in the grain bill that it would have taken care of itself. I tasted after each running, pre-boil, and post-boil. I found there to be the over-steeped black tea taste. Although my girlfriend thought I was being crazy, it was very obvious to me.
This morning (about 14 hours after and before there was an obvious fermentation), there was a lot of trub already at the bottom. About 3/4 gallon. Is it possible that a lot of the astringent flavors were coming from the material (protein and what not) that is now laying at the bottom of the carboy? This is going to sit in the primary for 3 weeks, and so I probably won't taste until closer to that time. But my fear is that our beer is going to have this flavor. I have read that gelatin can help pulled out some of the tannins and might do that if the flavor is still there.
I believe that the mash pH my have been too high. Possibly up to 6.1, but issue was that my pH meter, which I though was calibrated, was not. So this is guess. After all the research I did, I slacked on the pH. I figured with all the dark specialty grains in the grain bill that it would have taken care of itself. I tasted after each running, pre-boil, and post-boil. I found there to be the over-steeped black tea taste. Although my girlfriend thought I was being crazy, it was very obvious to me.
This morning (about 14 hours after and before there was an obvious fermentation), there was a lot of trub already at the bottom. About 3/4 gallon. Is it possible that a lot of the astringent flavors were coming from the material (protein and what not) that is now laying at the bottom of the carboy? This is going to sit in the primary for 3 weeks, and so I probably won't taste until closer to that time. But my fear is that our beer is going to have this flavor. I have read that gelatin can help pulled out some of the tannins and might do that if the flavor is still there.