boobiedazzler
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NickJD has previously championed the use of a coffee-grinder to prepare grains for a BIAB mash. While I have never been entirely comfortable with the idea of five kg's of dust, inclusive of husk powder, there has been occasion where I have whipped up some grain with this method.
But let's think about some of the other power tools in the kitchen. About a year or so ago I received quite a few kilos of base grain which I asked to be 'fine cracked'. For whatever reason, it came to me 'coarse cracked', quite the opposite of my request. It wasn't a problem though, I whizzed it up in the food processor and it then looked to be a satisfactory crack.
So this gave me the idea that I could start buying some uncracked grains, and prepare as required. The first failure with this was a few weeks ago, when I tried to prepare a kilo of matled wheat. Apart from about 15% of the processing pot, those husks refused to crack.
Fast-forward to this evening, I just finished roasting a kilo of pale grain for 90 minutes at 100 degrees, with occasional hand-shovel (malt shovel's younger, cruder sister) turning, and took a decent sample into the same food processor, thinking that wheat husks are tougher than barkey husks, so I could repeat my early succes with the 'coarse cracked' experiment. No such luck. Doesn't frikking do much. Tried different volumes in the 'pot' too, from 50g to about 400g and all parts in between.
What to do, I have a baking tray full of beautifully buiscuty fresh roasred malted barley in front of me, but need to crack the buggers before tomorrow morning. The mind is going back to the coffee-grinder method. OK, it's only 1/5th of the total mash, with no worries about stuck sparges, but the self-discovered undesirable in the process for me lately is goddamn trub. And we're talking pre-ferment here. So pulerised husk powder isn't high on my list of repeatables.
But wait ! Bobbie has a blender ! Not just any old blender, but a big, heavy duty testosterone machine that makes me wimper like a shcoolgirl when I lay my eyes upon it. It doesnt get much use, because mostly I am too much in awe of it's poweful demeanour. This kitchen gadget is from the school that brought us James Dean, Evil Kinevil and Arthur Fonzerelli. Needless to say, it has a glass jug. a THICK glass jug. Pee Wee Herman could never lift this ******* of it's cradle to serve you a smoothie, evn with both hands on the handle. <walks away><walks back> I just weighed it with the brew scales, and the jug is roughly 2.3 kilos in weight.<walks away><walks back> The base, ie the motor unit and controls, weighs in a about 2.8 kilos.
SO how does it perform ? Earlier I fisted in about 200 grams and hit 'pulse' for a count of 10 seconds (using the onethousand, twothouand, threthousand method of time) and the still warm grain was totally demolished. Ok, not totally, it wasnt 100% baby powder, but most of it was. Eactly what I think my cheapo coffe grinder would do.
Nest batch, I got all cocky and put twice as much in. It ended up a mixture of powder, but at least 50% was uncracked, untouched. Wizz a bit more, still no joy.
So I tried another 200g or so, reducing the last volume by half, and the same as the original whirl. This time for five seconds. The result ? A beautiful crack, finer than a 'shop crack' but with the same amount of untouched grains, that is not many at all. I repeated the volume and the pulse time a few times more, and would say that it produces a really good crack. I wish I could take some photos, but words will have to suffice.
Right now, I am giving a big thumbs up for my own discovery of having a pre-existing peice of apparatus that will no doubt become my new friend on a brewday prep.
But let's think about some of the other power tools in the kitchen. About a year or so ago I received quite a few kilos of base grain which I asked to be 'fine cracked'. For whatever reason, it came to me 'coarse cracked', quite the opposite of my request. It wasn't a problem though, I whizzed it up in the food processor and it then looked to be a satisfactory crack.
So this gave me the idea that I could start buying some uncracked grains, and prepare as required. The first failure with this was a few weeks ago, when I tried to prepare a kilo of matled wheat. Apart from about 15% of the processing pot, those husks refused to crack.
Fast-forward to this evening, I just finished roasting a kilo of pale grain for 90 minutes at 100 degrees, with occasional hand-shovel (malt shovel's younger, cruder sister) turning, and took a decent sample into the same food processor, thinking that wheat husks are tougher than barkey husks, so I could repeat my early succes with the 'coarse cracked' experiment. No such luck. Doesn't frikking do much. Tried different volumes in the 'pot' too, from 50g to about 400g and all parts in between.
What to do, I have a baking tray full of beautifully buiscuty fresh roasred malted barley in front of me, but need to crack the buggers before tomorrow morning. The mind is going back to the coffee-grinder method. OK, it's only 1/5th of the total mash, with no worries about stuck sparges, but the self-discovered undesirable in the process for me lately is goddamn trub. And we're talking pre-ferment here. So pulerised husk powder isn't high on my list of repeatables.
But wait ! Bobbie has a blender ! Not just any old blender, but a big, heavy duty testosterone machine that makes me wimper like a shcoolgirl when I lay my eyes upon it. It doesnt get much use, because mostly I am too much in awe of it's poweful demeanour. This kitchen gadget is from the school that brought us James Dean, Evil Kinevil and Arthur Fonzerelli. Needless to say, it has a glass jug. a THICK glass jug. Pee Wee Herman could never lift this ******* of it's cradle to serve you a smoothie, evn with both hands on the handle. <walks away><walks back> I just weighed it with the brew scales, and the jug is roughly 2.3 kilos in weight.<walks away><walks back> The base, ie the motor unit and controls, weighs in a about 2.8 kilos.
SO how does it perform ? Earlier I fisted in about 200 grams and hit 'pulse' for a count of 10 seconds (using the onethousand, twothouand, threthousand method of time) and the still warm grain was totally demolished. Ok, not totally, it wasnt 100% baby powder, but most of it was. Eactly what I think my cheapo coffe grinder would do.
Nest batch, I got all cocky and put twice as much in. It ended up a mixture of powder, but at least 50% was uncracked, untouched. Wizz a bit more, still no joy.
So I tried another 200g or so, reducing the last volume by half, and the same as the original whirl. This time for five seconds. The result ? A beautiful crack, finer than a 'shop crack' but with the same amount of untouched grains, that is not many at all. I repeated the volume and the pulse time a few times more, and would say that it produces a really good crack. I wish I could take some photos, but words will have to suffice.
Right now, I am giving a big thumbs up for my own discovery of having a pre-existing peice of apparatus that will no doubt become my new friend on a brewday prep.