carpedaym
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- 26/12/12
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Uh-oh, look out. Noob with HSA question!
If you aerate your hot water BEFORE adding your grains to the mash, will the oxygen eventually bind to the proteins, possibly causing downstream hot side aeration?
I ask because the hot water in my house comes out at about 65c (hmm, convenient). If I stick my BIAB pot under the bath tap, I'd be well on my way to dough-in temp. However there'd be a heck of a lot of aeration happening as it filled. Can I do this?
I've done some reading & listened to a few podcasts on the issue, but haven't found anywhere this is clarified. They always talk about not to splash the "wort" (as opposed to "water" or "hot liquor") and that is can occur "during" the mash (again, ambiguous).
To be honest, I have some sodium meta-bisulfite lying around so I'll probably throw a pinch of that in as suggested in previous threads, but I am a curious kitten who would like to know anyway. ^_^
If you aerate your hot water BEFORE adding your grains to the mash, will the oxygen eventually bind to the proteins, possibly causing downstream hot side aeration?
I ask because the hot water in my house comes out at about 65c (hmm, convenient). If I stick my BIAB pot under the bath tap, I'd be well on my way to dough-in temp. However there'd be a heck of a lot of aeration happening as it filled. Can I do this?
I've done some reading & listened to a few podcasts on the issue, but haven't found anywhere this is clarified. They always talk about not to splash the "wort" (as opposed to "water" or "hot liquor") and that is can occur "during" the mash (again, ambiguous).
To be honest, I have some sodium meta-bisulfite lying around so I'll probably throw a pinch of that in as suggested in previous threads, but I am a curious kitten who would like to know anyway. ^_^