A month or so back, my cat decided to rip open my pack of irish moss and eat it.
Definately didn't settle out as well in the kettle - although (and i'm sure is completely unrelated) after fermentation and a week of CC, the trub had settled out so well (alot better than usual - and without any finings/gelatine) that I could tip the fermenter up to get the last bit of beer out and the trub stayed stuck together as a nice compact layer.
I kettle no-chill, Thirsty and was wondering why, after 12+ hours of cooling in the kettle, whirlfloc and koppafloc and using none (by accident) can create such different break material results if they are both really useless for this kind of chilling?
chefefect, Irish moss is used as kettle finings, meaning it is used at the end of your boil. I don't think there are any reasons to use it at any other time.
I haven't listened to the podcast but can you indicate how they suggest whirlfoc at 10 mins will affect IBU (from additions 60 and onwards)?
I'd really love to see a further explanation and some extra evidence for what one bloke says on a radio show before I give it any credence when it comes to adjusting my recipes.
Whirlfoc strips IBU? Maybe it does.
Noticeably in my wort?
I'm not convinced.
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