Best Pilsner Malt - Do I need a protein rest?

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madawoods

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I've heard that some of the German malts aren't as modified and would benefit from a Protein rest. Any thoughts or experience brewing with this malt?
 
Martin is right, Best pils is highly modified so no need for a protein rest.

I'm not much of a fan of anecdotal evidence, but FWIW, I've used it a bunch of times without doing a protein rest and everything turned out fine.
 
verysupple said:
Martin is right, Best pils is highly modified so no need for a protein rest.

I'm not much of a fan of anecdotal evidence, but FWIW, I've used it a bunch of times without doing a protein rest and everything turned out fine.
Thanks lads, it great when you get a decisive answer!
 
Throwing a cat amongst the pigeons.....

Whilst a protein rest may not be NECCESSARY, it has other benefits, such as head retention, stability & clarity, so make your own decisions....
 
Historically German malts have been under modified, leading to decoction mashes. This is what the texts are referring to. Nowadays all malts are highly modified
 
Martin - I do a short high protein rest for most beers (52-55 for around 5 mins) for almost every brew and combine it with a 72 rest for 10 which definitely helps head retention but a longer rest at lower temps can degrade proteins too much and have the opposite effect.. Found this out when a 5 min rest became 2 hours on a mate's system, brewing a Rochefort 10 tribute (hence my distrust of HERMS and things I can't easily fix).
 
manticle said:
Martin - I do a short high protein rest for most beers (52-55 for around 5 mins) for almost every brew and combine it with a 72 rest for 10 which definitely helps head retention but a longer rest at lower temps can degrade proteins too much and have the opposite effect.. Found this out when a 5 min rest became 2 hours on a mate's system, brewing a Rochefort 10 tribute (hence my distrust of HERMS and things I can't easily fix).
Yup, done the same myself. These days, i keep it simple mostly. For your typical Pilsner malts, it's really (i believe) not necessary to do the protein rests though. The current generation of base malts are pretty well modified. best Malz, Wetermann, etc. on the other hand, if i were doing a floor malted pils/ bohemian pilsner base, i still tend to do step mashes and decoctions with them. Simply because the results are worth the effort. it's not that you CAN'T, Nor SHOULDN'T, it a case of, there's not much of a need. If you can read the newspaper through your Pilsner, it's probably clear enough.

I typically do a 72 degree rest for 15-20 minutes is always a good idea for better foam stability with all of them. Common practice.

When it come to boil times with pilsner malts, i know some guys say 60 minutes is enough and they don't get DMS issues. I have before. I've also had some bloody woeful DMS in the odd one of them. 90 minutes for me now with the standard pilsner malts out of germany and i do a full 120 minute with the floor malted / bo pils malts. Except using the Australian Pilsner base malts, then i just do a 60-75 minute and never had e DMS issue.

End waffle.
 
manticle said:
Martin - I do a short high protein rest for most beers (52-55 for around 5 mins) for almost every brew and combine it with a 72 rest for 10 which definitely helps head retention but a longer rest at lower temps can degrade proteins too much and have the opposite effect.. Found this out when a 5 min rest became 2 hours on a mate's system, brewing a Rochefort 10 tribute (hence my distrust of HERMS and things I can't easily fix).
I've been doing this on all beers since manticle suggested it to me. I like the results. My HLT is stuffed at the moment but when it's fixed I'll continue doing it. I can do it on the stove with two pots but it's a bit of a pain haha.

I used a few bags of best pils. I found it contributes a nice euro aroma and flavour. Made a nice koelsh and a great helles with it.
 
HBHB said:
Yup, done the same myself. These days, i keep it simple mostly. For your typical Pilsner malts, it's really (i believe) not necessary to do the protein rests though. The current generation of base malts are pretty well modified. best Malz, Wetermann, etc. on the other hand, if i were doing a floor malted pils/ bohemian pilsner base, i still tend to do step mashes and decoctions with them. Simply because the results are worth the effort. it's not that you CAN'T, Nor SHOULDN'T, it a case of, there's not much of a need. If you can read the newspaper through your Pilsner, it's probably clear enough.

I typically do a 72 degree rest for 15-20 minutes is always a good idea for better foam stability with all of them. Common practice.

When it come to boil times with pilsner malts, i know some guys say 60 minutes is enough and they don't get DMS issues. I have before. I've also had some bloody woeful DMS in the odd one of them. 90 minutes for me now with the standard pilsner malts out of germany and i do a full 120 minute with the floor malted / bo pils malts. Except using the Australian Pilsner base malts, then i just do a 60-75 minute and never had e DMS issue.

End waffle.
Meant Martin OC rather than you.

Definitely no more necessary than doing a separate alpha and beta rest. I still prefer the results though.
 
HBHB said:
Yup, done the same myself. These days, i keep it simple mostly. For your typical Pilsner malts, it's really (i believe) not necessary to do the protein rests though. The current generation of base malts are pretty well modified. best Malz, Wetermann, etc. on the other hand, if i were doing a floor malted pils/ bohemian pilsner base, i still tend to do step mashes and decoctions with them. Simply because the results are worth the effort. it's not that you CAN'T, Nor SHOULDN'T, it a case of, there's not much of a need. If you can read the newspaper through your Pilsner, it's probably clear enough.

I typically do a 72 degree rest for 15-20 minutes is always a good idea for better foam stability with all of them. Common practice.

When it come to boil times with pilsner malts, i know some guys say 60 minutes is enough and they don't get DMS issues. I have before. I've also had some bloody woeful DMS in the odd one of them. 90 minutes for me now with the standard pilsner malts out of germany and i do a full 120 minute with the floor malted / bo pils malts. Except using the Australian Pilsner base malts, then i just do a 60-75 minute and never had e DMS issue.

End waffle.
Sorry for highjacking the thread but I'm keen on cracking a really good bo pils, so I brought a bag of the floor malted pils malt on the basis that it was the most expensive so it must be the best. I have also been looking at doing a decoction mash for the same reason (time being money and all). What sort of decoction mash do you find most effective?

Cheers

Luke
 
Is the 72 rest you're talking about separate to mash out? Thanks for all the feedback, I've usually done a 90 min mash so I'll stick with that but leave the protein rest for now for simplicity. I'm not fussed about clarity and I'm looking at doing something more of a pale ale as follows. Received some great feedback so far so feel free to chip in on the recipe good or bad. Not sure about the Columbus, have mixed results - also have some Styrian Goldings I might throw one half as I split the batch

Batch Size (L): 46.0
Total Grain (kg): 10.400
Total Hops (g): 160.00
Original Gravity (OG): 1.052 (°P): 12.9
Final Gravity (FG): 1.013 (°P): 3.3
Alcohol by Volume (ABV): 5.11 %
Colour (SRM): 5.2 (EBC): 10.2
Bitterness (IBU): 33.7 (Average)
Brewhouse Efficiency (%): 75
Boil Time (Minutes): 90
Grain Bill
----------------
8.200 kg Pilsner (78.85%)
1.000 kg Wheat Malt (9.62%)
0.600 kg Victory (5.77%)
0.400 kg Munich I (3.85%)
0.200 kg Carapils (Dextrine) (1.92%)
Hop Bill
----------------
20.0 g Magnum Pellet (12.2% Alpha) @ 60 Minutes (Boil) (0.4 g/L)
20.0 g Centennial Pellet (10% Alpha) @ 30 Minutes (Boil) (0.4 g/L)
20.0 g Columbus Pellet (14.6% Alpha) @ 10 Minutes (Boil) (0.4 g/L)
40.0 g Galaxy Pellet (13.4% Alpha) @ 5 Minutes (Boil) (0.9 g/L)
60.0 g Galaxy Pellet (13.4% Alpha) @ 5 Days (Dry Hop) (1.3 g/L)
 
lmccrone said:
Sorry for highjacking the thread but I'm keen on cracking a really good bo pils, so I brought a bag of the floor malted pils malt on the basis that it was the most expensive so it must be the best. I have also been looking at doing a decoction mash for the same reason (time being money and all). What sort of decoction mash do you find most effective?

Cheers

Luke
Flick across to this link & scroll down to Triple decoction and go nuts.

I still pull out a bag of floor malted stuff every now and then when a streak of insanity hits me and I'm bored.

Nothing like a decoction mash in basic gear to set the mind straight. :blink:

It's a nice recipe done at 40 IBU's :icon_drool2:
 
HBHB said:
... on the other hand, if i were doing a floor malted pils/ bohemian pilsner base, i still tend to do step mashes and decoctions with them. Simply because the results are worth the effort. it's not that you CAN'T, Nor SHOULDN'T, it a case of, there's not much of a need. If you can read the newspaper through your Pilsner, it's probably clear enough.
What's different about the floor malted pils or bo pils malts that makes them worth the effort? Does a step mash or decoction get something out of them that you don't get with other malts?
 
verysupple said:
What's different about the floor malted pils or bo pils malts that makes them worth the effort? Does a step mash or decoction get something out of them that you don't get with other malts?
Different barley variety and not as well modified.
 
HBHB, the different barley variety is a correct statement, but your conclusion that they are not as well modified is totally incorrect. Go have a look at the C of A or even the specifications. Both Best Malz and Weyermann have that data on their websites if you dont have an applicable C of A. You need to look at the "Kolbach index" and the "Hartong" figures along with the protein levels. Higher proteins will require a higher level of modification, but generally German malts ar in the lower protein catagory anyway. I will see if I can find an explanation of malt analys that might help here.

And lets give the respective maltsters a break! They work bloody hard to make sure their malts are brewable and consistent. This "German malts are under modified" mantra has been around since I started brewing some 20 yers ago and simply is not correct. I dont know of any main stream maltster that has knowingly or deliberatly produced an "under modified" malt.

In my experience with English floor malted malts, they are always sprouted to 100% acrospire growth and almost lovingly nurtured through the whole malting process. And you certainly do not need a decoction mash to bring out the best in a floor malted Maris Otter.

Wes
 
wessmith said:
HBHB, the different barley variety is a correct statement, but your conclusion that they are not as well modified is totally incorrect. Go have a look at the C of A or even the specifications. Both Best Malz and Weyermann have that data on their websites if you dont have an applicable C of A. You need to look at the "Kolbach index" and the "Hartong" figures along with the protein levels. Higher proteins will require a higher level of modification, but generally German malts ar in the lower protein catagory anyway. I will see if I can find an explanation of malt analys that might help here.

And lets give the respective maltsters a break! They work bloody hard to make sure their malts are brewable and consistent. This "German malts are under modified" mantra has been around since I started brewing some 20 yers ago and simply is not correct. I dont know of any main stream maltster that has knowingly or deliberatly produced an "under modified" malt.

In my experience with English floor malted malts, they are always sprouted to 100% acrospire growth and almost lovingly nurtured through the whole malting process. And you certainly do not need a decoction mash to bring out the best in a floor malted Maris Otter.

Wes
Nice to see some facts finding their way into this thread, some good info there Wes, I'd be keen to see any info you could find that will help explain the C of A that the malsters supply, it looks pretty technical at first glance but would surely help dispel the under modified myths.
 
wessmith said:
HBHB, the different barley variety is a correct statement, but your conclusion that they are not as well modified is totally incorrect. Go have a look at the C of A or even the specifications. Both Best Malz and Weyermann have that data on their websites if you dont have an applicable C of A. You need to look at the "Kolbach index" and the "Hartong" figures along with the protein levels. Higher proteins will require a higher level of modification, but generally German malts ar in the lower protein catagory anyway. I will see if I can find an explanation of malt analys that might help here.

And lets give the respective maltsters a break! They work bloody hard to make sure their malts are brewable and consistent. This "German malts are under modified" mantra has been around since I started brewing some 20 yers ago and simply is not correct. I dont know of any main stream maltster that has knowingly or deliberatly produced an "under modified" malt.

In my experience with English floor malted malts, they are always sprouted to 100% acrospire growth and almost lovingly nurtured through the whole malting process. And you certainly do not need a decoction mash to bring out the best in a floor malted Maris Otter.

Wes
Thanks Wes. Will have to get in and do some more up to date reading then. Appreciate the information.

Martin
 
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