Dark grains in for the full mash?

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BarryNL

Dark grains in for the full mash?

Post by BarryNL » Fri May 11, 2007 8:47 am

I seem to remember a comment here somewhere which suggested putting dark specialty grains into the mash later (e.g. only for the last 30 mins) to reduce tannin extraction. I'm planning a brew with some chocolate and black malts in (and crystal) - is there any point in saving these grains for the last 30 mins of the mash, or does everyone just mash the whole lot for the full time?

steve_flack

Post by steve_flack » Fri May 11, 2007 8:49 am

Up 'til now I've just chucked them all in but the mash pH has always been a smidgen low - especially with stouts. I might try leaving them out and adding at the end.

BarryNL

Post by BarryNL » Fri May 11, 2007 8:54 am

steve_flack wrote:Up 'til now I've just chucked them all in but the mash pH has always been a smidgen low - especially with stouts. I might try leaving them out and adding at the end.
I can't imaging this brew being a problem for the pH - it's only about 75g choc and 75g black. Personally, I don't expect much of a tannin problem either at 67degC, but you never know.

oblivious

Post by oblivious » Fri May 11, 2007 9:04 am

My imperial porter has 567 grams of chocolate malt in it with no problems with tannin extract. Tannin extract is dependent on high pH and temp; if you have this problem you will get tannin extraction from you base malt.

kinnockthecat

Post by kinnockthecat » Fri May 11, 2007 8:47 pm

My Mad Hatter brew has 17g of chocolate malt and that goes in at the beginning. However I am considering a trial with it and put it in for last 30 mins or so.

UserDeleted

Post by UserDeleted » Fri May 11, 2007 10:20 pm

If you want a quicker maturing beer, add your dark grains at the end, however dark grains do contribute to getting the rigt mash pH which is something to consider.

Personally I add all my grain at the begining of the mash, and apart from a 'roasty' character to my very dark beers which fades with maturation, there is little problem.

You could also try cold steeping which is a method put forward by Mary Ann Gruber of the Briess Malting Company. For this you take 3 times the Dark grain specified in the recipe, add cold water and leave for 16 hours. Strain the liquid from the grain and add to the boiler.

BigEd

Re: Dark grains in for the full mash?

Post by BigEd » Fri May 11, 2007 10:24 pm

BarryNL wrote:- is there any point in saving these grains for the last 30 mins of the mash
No. Add them with the entire grist bill and pay no attention to this homebrewing mythology.

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mooj
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Post by mooj » Fri May 11, 2007 11:19 pm

I agree with adding them later but also agree that there is a ph advantage of adding earlier. I prefer to adjust ph with crs.

I don't think there's a tannin problem with adding at the beginning (assuming a good mash temp and ph) but darker grains are naturally more bitter and IMO a smoother brew can be made if you add the grains later.

RabMaxwell

Post by RabMaxwell » Sat May 12, 2007 3:04 am

I add my dark grains at the end as i have very soft water & was finding with dark beers my PH was below 5.2

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