Stiff Mash
Stiff Mash
Im doing another Durden Park recipe and it calls for a very stiff mash. The last one i did was a stiff mash so i used 2/1 ratio after looking up on the forum and seeing what other people thought was a stiff mash, but that was still quite watery. What consistency am i looing for in a very stiff mash, would 1.5/1 or even 1/1 be ok for this?
thanks
ADDLED
thanks
ADDLED
Re: Stiff Mash
Regardless of what it says I still wouldn't go any less than 2:1. If the beer is very strong then take the first runnings and do a partigyle. What's the recipe?
Re: Stiff Mash
Tks Steve, its the 1750 London Porter @ OG 1.090.
Whats partigyle? Does that mean 1st runnings for the main beer then small beer with the rest?
Whats partigyle? Does that mean 1st runnings for the main beer then small beer with the rest?
Re: Stiff Mash
It can be that or you can take the separate gyles and combine them. Some brewers boiled the gyles separately and combined them others blended them then boiled. Fullers still partigyle their main beers (Chiswick, LP, ESB and GP). They get two gyles and blend accordingly. IIRC they currently blend then boil but I could be wrong. In the past they also partigyled their darker beers (mild, OB, OBE).
Re: Stiff Mash
Daft questions:
Is there a reason why a stiff mash would be required?
Is it just to keep the quantity of wort lower or is there some other advantage (apart from being able to mash more grain in a given size of MT)?
Is there a reason why a stiff mash would be required?
Is it just to keep the quantity of wort lower or is there some other advantage (apart from being able to mash more grain in a given size of MT)?
Re: Stiff Mash
A stiff mash (about 2.5L water per kg grain) will give you a less fermentable wort resulting in a sweeter/maltier beer.
Re: Stiff Mash
Tks again Steve. Forgive me if Im having a blonde moment, but if you blend the gyles then boil, isnt that an entire mash, the same as I already do? i.e. adding the subsequent runnings to the first runnings in the kettle?steve_flack wrote:It can be that or you can take the separate gyles and combine them. Some brewers boiled the gyles separately and combined them others blended them then boiled.
What's the difference unless i make a separate beer with each runnings?
Cheers
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- Jolum
- Hollow Legs
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Re: Stiff Mash
Me too. That's my usual ratioboingy wrote:I consider 2.5l per kg to be a normal mash, not a stiff one.

"Everybody has to believe in something, I believe I'll have another drink." - W.C. Fields
Re: Stiff Mash
OK. Let's assume you get two worts one about 1.085 and the other around 1.030. You could either take these as two beers or you could blend them in differing proportions to give any beer in between. In Fuller's case they have a number of beers they brew from those two worts ranging between 1.037 for chiswick up to 1.080 ish for golden pride. Fullers obviously sell a lot more London Pride than anything else so they blend to get the 1.044 for that. But from the exact same mash they could blend to get some esb and a bit of chiswick or whatever they want on that day. They can brew more than one beer on any given day from the same mash. Geddit?ADDLED wrote:Tks again Steve. Forgive me if Im having a blonde moment, but if you blend the gyles then boil, isnt that an entire mash, the same as I already do? i.e. adding the subsequent runnings to the first runnings in the kettle?steve_flack wrote:It can be that or you can take the separate gyles and combine them. Some brewers boiled the gyles separately and combined them others blended them then boiled.
What's the difference unless i make a separate beer with each runnings?
Cheers
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- trucker5774
- Falling off the Barstool
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Re: Stiff Mash
Does a stiff mash actually produce more unfermentable sugars or just a high gravity wort, I thought the sparge (and the amount of sparging) determined the gravity (along with the boil, of course) assuming the grain bill remains a constant 

John
Drinking/Already drunk........ Trucker's Anti-Freeze (Turbo Cider), Truckers Delight, Night Trucker, Rose wine, Truckers Hitch, Truckers Revenge, Trucker's Lay-by, Trucker's Trailer, Flower Truck, Trucker's Gearshift, Trucker's Horn, Truck Crash, Fixby Gold!
Conditioning... Doing what? Get it down your neck! ........
FV 1............
FV 2............
FV 3............
Next Brews..... Trucker's Jack Knife
Drinking/Already drunk........ Trucker's Anti-Freeze (Turbo Cider), Truckers Delight, Night Trucker, Rose wine, Truckers Hitch, Truckers Revenge, Trucker's Lay-by, Trucker's Trailer, Flower Truck, Trucker's Gearshift, Trucker's Horn, Truck Crash, Fixby Gold!
Conditioning... Doing what? Get it down your neck! ........
FV 1............
FV 2............
FV 3............
Next Brews..... Trucker's Jack Knife
Re: Stiff Mash
While 2.5L per kg is suggested in BYOBRA - and no doubt appropriate for British Ales - according to Palmer it's on the stiff side of things, with (if my conversions are correct) 3.1L/kg being the 'ideal' mash ratio and 4.1L/kg defined as a thin mash.Jolum wrote:Me too. That's my usual ratioboingy wrote:I consider 2.5l per kg to be a normal mash, not a stiff one.
According to JP (see the link above for his logic and reason) it does produce a more unfermentable wort.trucker5774 wrote:Does a stiff mash actually produce more unfermentable sugars or just a high gravity wort, I thought the sparge (and the amount of sparging) determined the gravity (along with the boil, of course) assuming the grain bill remains a constant
Re: Stiff Mash
While that's true (or at least true according to David Line) I believe that the effect is quite small, certainly much less significant than other factors such as mash temperature and pH.Wolfy wrote:A stiff mash (about 2.5L water per kg grain) will give you a less fermentable wort resulting in a sweeter/maltier beer.
Re: Stiff Mash
I think Jim's right in saying that other factors have a greater influence.