hello,
browsing across recipes for random ales i have occasional seen a low proportion of wheat dme in that may only account for a few percent of fermentables .
can someone tell me what this may contribute, i have not used wheat before and am wondering what it may add when not going for a "wheat beer" per se.
also, steeped oatmeal features in some ?, does this really do anything, when not contributing fermentable sugars due to not mashing / sparging ?
when adding caramalts / oatmeal etc to beer engine, it seems to "think" (i think (?)) i am using them for an all grain recipe.
do you know how much (of fermentable sugars) is extracted when steeping as opposed to the number quoted in beer engine; surely it's considerably less ?
THANKS
wheat dme / oatmeal / beer engine - stupid questions
Re: wheat dme / oatmeal / beer engine - stupid questions
I think this is used for head retention sometimes.browsing across recipes for random ales i have occasional seen a low proportion of wheat dme in that may only account for a few percent of fermentables .
Not sure about BeerEngine - I use Beersmith which has an option for Extract brewing which means steeping is implied for added grains.
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Re: wheat dme / oatmeal / beer engine - stupid questions
simon50 wrote:...
also, steeped oatmeal features in some ?, does this really do anything, when not contributing fermentable sugars due to not mashing / sparging ?
...
I use Flaked Oats regularly and Oat malt occasionally to (AG) brews
Flaked Oats and Oat Malt both add mouthfeel to a brew.
I've heard that if you add too much it can give an 'oily' mouthfeel.
If a significant amount of Flaked Oats is added to an all grain recipe, I think it benefits from a step mash with a 15 min glucinase step ~40C, to reduce gumminess / chance of stuck mash and starch haze.
Oat Malt is less problematic and I'd opt for these if you're steeping them.