I have always added a tablet of whirlfloc to the 25L brew at 15mins before the end of the boil.
I was chatting to a chap, who said to help with chill haze add at 60mins.
Any tips or comments ?
Whirlfloc is designed to help cold break, its pretty much purified Irish Moss and works like a charm. It is best added in the final 5 minutes but anything up to 15 minutes is OK. You don't have cold break when the wort is boiling (doh) and in fact even the most rapid chilling will not accomplish full cold break but as a general rule the quicker the cooling the more cold break, of course if you are using a plate chiller or CFC its going to end up in your fermentor!! Its quite good for beer in the fermentation process, but to be good it has to flocc. out, thus whirlfloc. Letting it spin around for 60 minutes is useless, the mechanical action of the rolling boil, the time and temperature and the addition of hops are what creates the hot break. Break (cold or hot) or is all about "colloidal stability" which in a sense is about clarity, clarity is certainly the most easily obserbvable result, haze is a result of colloidal instability (its also a result of turbidity but thats anothe r DOH). I some cases these haze forming compounds only occour when the beer is chiled..its what we call chill haze. If I can get a camera to work and can work out how isert an image I will show you what I mean.
K
I've just been reading the wiki on gelatine and it claims that boiling it will denature it, rendering it useless. That would suggest not using it directly in the boil.Teaspoon of gelatin [at flameout] will also work fairly well I suspect.
Plastic (PVVP) which has the opposite charge is added as I understand primarily as a filtering aid and is added or injected directly before the filter.
And my query was - is flameout the wrong time/place to be using gelatine?QB, each of the finings has it's place. It's a matter of using the right fining at the right time for it's intended purpose. A combination of each fining method, in it's correct sequence, will give you the best results overall.
In contrast to Darren's suggestion.I've just been reading the wiki on gelatine and it claims that boiling it will denature it, rendering it useless. That would suggest not using it directly in the boil.
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