The one data point I am aware of (http://braukaiser.com/blog/blog/2009/05/12/cold-water-sparging/) concluded sparge temp didn't make a significant difference in the perception of the beer. It was however an imperfect experiment due to very minor recipe changes between the hot and cold sparge batches. My guess is that a series of well controlled experiments would show that there are many more important factors than sparge temp that affect the beer perception, even if you could eventually show some detectable difference due to sparge temp. I'm not going to run those experiments. 1: because I don't think it's worthwhile, and 2: because I can't control all the other variables well enough to be able to separate out a minor effect due to sparge temp. But, if someone does do such experiments, I will review the results. And, if the results are convincing, I will change my opinions.
Brew on![]()
Do you have any insight into why the experiment showed the cold water sparge yielded cloudy beer with a stable head and fuller mouth feel compared to the hot sparge producing a clear, less stable beer with a less full mouthfeel?
Seems like something is going on with sparge temperature.