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Pat I would say after playing around with thick and thin mash's your above quote has much merit.You cant always take what you read in home brew books as being gospel. I rather test theories myself and refer to proven scientific data.Thanks very much for the questions and suggestions for the spreadsheet. I'll reply properly to those after work.
Just quickly though on the dextrinous question above, have a look at this page.
Of particular interest is the section on mash thickness which says...
The results for mash thickness were somewhat surprising. Contrary to common believe no attenuation difference was seen between a thick mash (2.57 l/kg or 1.21 qt/lb) and a thin mash (5 l/kg or 2.37 qt/lb). Home brewing literature suggests that thin mashes lead to more fermentable worts, but technical brewing literature suggests that the mash concentration doesn't have much effect in well modified malts [Narziss, 2005]. Briggs cites data that doesn't show a change in fermentability when the mash thickness is changed [Briggs, 2004]. This was confirmed by these eperiments where all the data points were on the same curve that had already been established in the temperature experiment.
Back to you later on the spreadsheet and thanks,
Pat
GB