Had a long day yesterday. 12 hours work and then 3 hours forum stuff and then I wrote my last post here. Very rarely, usually after a lot of work etc, I might do a crappy post or two here on BIABrewer. When I do do that, I'll usually edit the post and make an apology asap. The best thing about my last post here is that I see that there is absolutely no need to waste time on an apology or an edit.
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Let's Get Back on Track[/center]
What We Do Know
1. Laboratory Tests for extract potential (
Congress Mash) show that there is only approximately 1.0% gain in extract potential between a fine and coarse grind. Considering that your kettle efficiency on an average brew might be about 80% then the difference will be about 0.8%.
Read:
This and
This. Hard stuff to get your head around.
2. We know from collecting many brewer's numbers, that kettle efficiency rises over time for many malts. So, doing less than a 90 minute mash can sometimes cause a significant loss in kettle efficiency. In some malts though, very little difference will be noted between say 60 and 90 minutes.
What We Don't Know
1. Does a
fine grind significantly speed up extraction?
2. More importantly, does a
fine grind significantly increase 'Kettle to Fermentor Loss (KFL)' and/or 'Fermentor to Packaging Loss (FPL)'? If so, it will also be reducing the amount of beer you end up with at the end of the day.
3. Does a
short mash time (regardless of grind) affect any parameters such as attenuation?
4. More importantly, does a
short mash time (regardless of grind) affect quality?
I think that summarises it

,
PP
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