

Also, according to Zymurgy, when you cold steep, you can do a larger steep than you need on the day, and once it`s strained off, the remainder can be kept in sealed container in frig. for up to a month.drtom wrote:Hi All
(Nice to be back after missing most of last year!)
If I can dip my nerdy oar in on the subject to the tea analogy....
When you're brewing tea, you're deliberately try to get the tannins out of the tea leaves. Cold steeping would simply not get them. When steeping specialty grains, you're getting a bunch of more soluble carbohydrates out of the grains, and trying to leave most of the tannins behind. Therefore it makes perfect sense that cold steeping should work, even though it's no way to make a cup of tea! There is one more important thing going on in steeping (depending on the grain) - which is the chomping up of long-chain carbohydrates (e.g. starch) by enzymes in the malted grains. While this is usually done in particular temperature ranges that optimize the performance of the alpha and beta amylase enzymes, the enzymes will still work at room temperature, just much more slowly, which is again okay if you're doing a 24hr steeping.
So I'm not a bioscientist, or an expert brewer, but the foregoing seems reasonable based on what I do know of biochemistry.
cheers, happy new year, and isn't it a bummer about all this hot weather,
dT.
Get TL to do it, you sent him flowers, surely he can do that for you?ryan wrote:Also, according to Zymurgy, when you cold steep, you can do a larger steep than you need on the day, and once it`s strained off, the remainder can be kept in sealed container in frig. for up to a month.drtom wrote:Hi All
(Nice to be back after missing most of last year!)
If I can dip my nerdy oar in on the subject to the tea analogy....
When you're brewing tea, you're deliberately try to get the tannins out of the tea leaves. Cold steeping would simply not get them. When steeping specialty grains, you're getting a bunch of more soluble carbohydrates out of the grains, and trying to leave most of the tannins behind. Therefore it makes perfect sense that cold steeping should work, even though it's no way to make a cup of tea! There is one more important thing going on in steeping (depending on the grain) - which is the chomping up of long-chain carbohydrates (e.g. starch) by enzymes in the malted grains. While this is usually done in particular temperature ranges that optimize the performance of the alpha and beta amylase enzymes, the enzymes will still work at room temperature, just much more slowly, which is again okay if you're doing a 24hr steeping.
So I'm not a bioscientist, or an expert brewer, but the foregoing seems reasonable based on what I do know of biochemistry.
cheers, happy new year, and isn't it a bummer about all this hot weather,
dT.
Which is something I didn`t know. So instead of doing 4 cold steeps in a month, say, you could just do one big one and reserve what you didn`t use.
But can someone else test that please? I don`t feel like buggering up $30 worth of beer just cos Zymurgy says so
Ok ryan, I have cold steeped .5kg of crystal and will halve and save in fridge. It is going into a LCPA. (How's your LCPA going?.....sorry that's a little off topic)Which is something I didn`t know. So instead of doing 4 cold steeps in a month, say, you could just do one big one and reserve what you didn`t use.
But can someone else test that please? I don`t feel like buggering up $30 worth of beer just cos Zymurgy says so
yep, have all the neccesary here, will have an empty fermenter tomorrow arv so it will be LCPA AT 6AM Sunday.Boonie wrote:Ok ryan, I have cold steeped .5kg of crystal and will halve and save in fridge. It is going into a LCPA. (How's your LCPA going?.....sorry that's a little off topic)Which is something I didn`t know. So instead of doing 4 cold steeps in a month, say, you could just do one big one and reserve what you didn`t use.
But can someone else test that please? I don`t feel like buggering up $30 worth of beer just cos Zymurgy says so
Cheers
Boonie
Will let you know doc. I am going to dry hop the hops in the primary for this one..........just to see what happens. I've added crystal before and it was pretty good.drsmurto wrote:Boonie
You are adding crystal to yur LCPA now. You must be on your 10th onbe by now, might be nice for all the newer brewers if you posted some comments about its evolution, a la the great hoegarden thread..... your LCPA recipe is a crowd favourite.
Yep, 15 minutes max.ryan wrote:{that`s only a 15 min. boil, right?}
Good point dT re the temp ranges of the amylase enzymes - too many brewers get fixated on having exactly the right mash temp and fear a dough-in with their grains in 74C strike water to achieve a 66C rest will result in killing all the low temp beta-amylase enzymes at the start of the mash. Sure, the enzymes have an upper limit, which is one reason why we do a boil, but enzymes are a reasonably hardy lot...drtom wrote:Hi All
(Nice to be back after missing most of last year!)
If I can dip my nerdy oar in on the subject to the tea analogy....
When you're brewing tea, you're deliberately try to get the tannins out of the tea leaves. Cold steeping would simply not get them. When steeping specialty grains, you're getting a bunch of more soluble carbohydrates out of the grains, and trying to leave most of the tannins behind. Therefore it makes perfect sense that cold steeping should work, even though it's no way to make a cup of tea! There is one more important thing going on in steeping (depending on the grain) - which is the chomping up of long-chain carbohydrates (e.g. starch) by enzymes in the malted grains. While this is usually done in particular temperature ranges that optimize the performance of the alpha and beta amylase enzymes, the enzymes will still work at room temperature, just much more slowly, which is again okay if you're doing a 24hr steeping.
So I'm not a bioscientist, or an expert brewer, but the foregoing seems reasonable based on what I do know of biochemistry.
cheers, happy new year, and isn't it a bummer about all this hot weather,
dT.
Two points: I no longer steep grains (the crystal and other "Steeping" category grains get mashed in along with the base malt in the mash tun) and as Ross did, when I bothered to steep grains back in the kit days, I used to steep cold and slowly bring the steep up to 70C before removing the grain bag, rinsing (sparging if you will) and then boiling the resultant sweet liquor with hop additions. In my earlier post, I guess I got sidetracked on the overnight topic and focussed on that rather than the steeping temp, but it's good to see that science confirms practice, and after all, isn't science simply a set of rules based on experience and learning?ryan wrote: Also, according to Zymurgy, when you cold steep, you can do a larger steep than you need on the day, and once it`s strained off, the remainder can be kept in sealed container in frig. for up to a month.
Which is something I didn`t know. So instead of doing 4 cold steeps in a month, say, you could just do one big one and reserve what you didn`t use.
But can someone else test that please? I don`t feel like buggering up $30 worth of beer just cos Zymurgy says so