ShredMaster
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 6/7/11
- Messages
- 155
- Reaction score
- 0
So I can can count the number of AG brews I've done without taking my shoes off but I'm thinking I may have accidentally discovered a magnificent mashing technique which may help or harm almost ANY brewer...
Firstly, my setup is not all that amazing and is a hand-me-down version of a bucket-in-a-bucket full volume mash setup, kinda BIABucket and meh, it works... So last night I set up my mash bucket at around 66-ish, wrapped it in this wierd reflective insulated foam thing (some delicate packing material at some point with a finish like a windscreen protector) and a good ol alfoil lid with my trust cappuccino thermometer nearby to take "accurate" readings when needed. It makes beer, usually. For space reasons, my "brewery" happens to be on an old rack-unit cabinet on wheels about 1m off the floor so I can wheel it around the place but traditionally it lives right in the centre of the garage dividing my guitar/amp setups and the horse-feed/motorbike parking. The "ManCave" (with exception for the horse stuff, washing machine, dryer, ironing board and kitty litter).
So last night, in my mashing euphoria, I happened to grab another beer or so, sit down next to my mashbuckets and realised I was in front of my guitar setup. So I did what anybody else woud do: plugged in my guitar and start playing.... And it just came to me.... I jammed, and went on and on and around and around and it just flowed out of me, I WAS ON FIRE!! Even my cat didn't run screaming this time!! I probably sounded like a squealing fan-belt but at the moment, in all the gloriousness of the situation and with the mash there to lap it all up with me, I was a rock star...
So somehow this has affected the mash considerably from some of my previous attempts with things such as:
I hereby ask for more help in this discover process: we need to determine several factors in how this has happened and how to replicate it..
Firstly, I propose some type of testing system where some brewers introduce different music towards their mash. Take note of what style of music as well as what artist or may never discover such wonders like if Willie Nelson's reggae album was actually serious or not...
For last nights mash, I played a fair bit of "old skool metal", a couple of Iron Maiden riffs, some chug-chug style Metallica-esque riffs, throw the odd bit of Sabbath. It was a renaissance of my teenage tape collection. I will try the next one with more of the cool swing/jazz style with some more bluesy tones, I wonder how that will go.
The real questions are:
This could be a pioneering technique! We need to investigate!!
Cheers,
Shred.
Firstly, my setup is not all that amazing and is a hand-me-down version of a bucket-in-a-bucket full volume mash setup, kinda BIABucket and meh, it works... So last night I set up my mash bucket at around 66-ish, wrapped it in this wierd reflective insulated foam thing (some delicate packing material at some point with a finish like a windscreen protector) and a good ol alfoil lid with my trust cappuccino thermometer nearby to take "accurate" readings when needed. It makes beer, usually. For space reasons, my "brewery" happens to be on an old rack-unit cabinet on wheels about 1m off the floor so I can wheel it around the place but traditionally it lives right in the centre of the garage dividing my guitar/amp setups and the horse-feed/motorbike parking. The "ManCave" (with exception for the horse stuff, washing machine, dryer, ironing board and kitty litter).
So last night, in my mashing euphoria, I happened to grab another beer or so, sit down next to my mashbuckets and realised I was in front of my guitar setup. So I did what anybody else woud do: plugged in my guitar and start playing.... And it just came to me.... I jammed, and went on and on and around and around and it just flowed out of me, I WAS ON FIRE!! Even my cat didn't run screaming this time!! I probably sounded like a squealing fan-belt but at the moment, in all the gloriousness of the situation and with the mash there to lap it all up with me, I was a rock star...
So somehow this has affected the mash considerably from some of my previous attempts with things such as:
- The mash did not drop more than 1.5'c over the hour and a bit, my cappuccino thermometer confirms what I thought when I touched it and went "**** thats hot!".
- The plastic tap in the bucket did not pop out or become loose at all during the mash, it waited until the mash-out phase for me to knock it and spit farking hot mashjuice all over me.
- I did not drop, break, discolour or crack one glass container of any description this time and maintained that through to the following morning.
- I did not burn myself during the boil
- I did not boil over
- No objects were unintentionally dropped during the mashing or boiling process
- I didn't even stand on the cat
I hereby ask for more help in this discover process: we need to determine several factors in how this has happened and how to replicate it..
Firstly, I propose some type of testing system where some brewers introduce different music towards their mash. Take note of what style of music as well as what artist or may never discover such wonders like if Willie Nelson's reggae album was actually serious or not...
For last nights mash, I played a fair bit of "old skool metal", a couple of Iron Maiden riffs, some chug-chug style Metallica-esque riffs, throw the odd bit of Sabbath. It was a renaissance of my teenage tape collection. I will try the next one with more of the cool swing/jazz style with some more bluesy tones, I wonder how that will go.
The real questions are:
- How will this affect the attenuation given a standard variable of yeast such as US-05 and 18'c ?
- Do the bittering hops benefit from more of an aggressive style (think, deathmetal, punk, grindcore, Slim Dusty) or mellow out given lighter styles (reggae, classical, jazz, new-Metallica)?
- Is there more body produces mashing to Aussie-rock at 66'c as opposed to British invasion at 64'c?
- Is it more fermentable?
- At what point does playing music where the band has changed singers affect which rest during the mash? ie: Bon Scott during protein rest vs Sammy Hagar during mash-out ??
This could be a pioneering technique! We need to investigate!!
Cheers,
Shred.