Muz
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 14/11/17
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For those HERMs brewers out there, how fast do you recirculate your mash and have you ever got astringency from over recirculation?
Over the last few years I've had some low-level astringency with some of my beer. This could come from a number of places in the brew including the grain crush, sparge temp/pH or even the hops. However, I've always suspected it was from recirculating too fast. I've tried to find information on this but there isn't a lot out there. The Electric Brewery states that if you use their setup (which is different from mine) you can run the pumps fully open. I also just purchased a HERMs-it and was told by the store that the limit on how fast I could recirculate was based on how good my false bottom is, indicating faster is better if you can do it. I have an SS Brewtech mash tun with a pretty decent false bottom and central drain so that's not an issue. Am I worrying about nothing when recirculating slower or have others found problems from running the pump too fast?
Over the last few years I've had some low-level astringency with some of my beer. This could come from a number of places in the brew including the grain crush, sparge temp/pH or even the hops. However, I've always suspected it was from recirculating too fast. I've tried to find information on this but there isn't a lot out there. The Electric Brewery states that if you use their setup (which is different from mine) you can run the pumps fully open. I also just purchased a HERMs-it and was told by the store that the limit on how fast I could recirculate was based on how good my false bottom is, indicating faster is better if you can do it. I have an SS Brewtech mash tun with a pretty decent false bottom and central drain so that's not an issue. Am I worrying about nothing when recirculating slower or have others found problems from running the pump too fast?