I have never experienced this. I have a 10bbl steam fired brewery and we brew Belgian beers so every recipe gets step mashed which is usually 146, 154 and 170. So I'm getting ready to brew my first Wit on the system which I have done for years on a 10 gallon system and using rice hulls. The day before the brew session we ground the grain into our grain hopper (while blending in rice hulls to the crushed grain in the hopper) with the intention of brewing the next day. Over night I come down with a major chest cold which keeps me out of work for 8 days. We brew when I come back to work and mash at 122, 154, 170. Everything looks great and we hit all our temps and duration times. However we discover that while moving into the fermenter that the gravity which should have been 1.061 is actually 1.024. Can grain sitting crushed in a grain hopper for 8 days deteriorate that fast? I live in Arizona in the mountains at 7000ft. I should mention that the grain bill was: 325lb Pilsen, 162lbs White Wheat, 162lbs Unmalted Wheat, 54lbs Flaked Barley, 15lbs Acidulated Malt, 50lbs Rice Hulls. Maybe I also should check to see if my mill is properly grinding the wheat malt.
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Terrible extraction rate after milled grain left in hopper for 8 days before brewing
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Leaving milled grain for a few days shouldn't affect efficiency. I've milled several days in advance with no ill effects. The grain will stale after several months, but even that shouldn't affect efficiency as much as flavor and color. I'm guessing your mill is the problem. Or maybe your head cold affected your ability to weigh grain accurately?
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Originally posted by gitchegumee View PostWhat was your wort pH? If it was low, your grain went slack. That'll do it.
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Originally posted by cisco View Post[...E]very recipe gets step mashed which is usually 146, 154 and 170. [...] I come back to work and mash at 122, 154, 170.
I'm curious about the change in the first step. Was that intentional? A typo? Perhaps also contributed to the problem?
(I saw that it was mostly the corn-mill setting, but I'm curious, too, about this change in process.)
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