Inadvertent Lag Times before Pitching
Q: I enjoy your column and hope to visit your brewpub in Nashville.
I sometimes get interrupted during my all-grain mash sessions and have to put my brewing on hold. Recently I interrupted a boil for 4 h (1 h of boil, 4 h rest, and 15 min reboil). On another batch, I had to leave my mash out for 2 h extra. What happens to the beer when allowed these unwanted rests? Are there crucial times that should not be extended, or those where an unplanned rest would be of no consequence? Are there remedial actions that can be taken?
In another batch of beer (6 gal of stout), I used 2 lb of barley that I had pressure-cooked before mashing. The sparge stuck (my first ever), and the fermentation was over in two days going from specific gravity of 1.050 to 1.020 in spite of a quart of fresh yeast (1 pint settled out, 1 pint liquid). The sweetness of the fermented stout was evident. Is this the Crabtree effect? What happens to sugars when you pressure-cook barley or other grains?
I don't have a recirculation system, and I frequently mash in at 132 °F (56 °C) with 3/4 qt/lb, then gradually add 1/2 qt/lb boiling water plus steam to raise the temperature to 155 °F (68 °C). During the 11/2 h rest, it cools to 145 °F (63 °C) as the saccharification rest is completed. Does the same sugar conversion take place during cool-down as during heat-up?
Finally, the beers were hazy. The hops in the beer with the 4 h rest were less than expected.
DM: Unwanted rests. Extending the mash saccharification rest would tend to produce a thinner beer because of an increased breakdown of dextrins into fermentable sugars. The other effect would be some souring of the mash, owing to the action of the thermophilic lactic bacteria that are naturally present in malt.
Whether you could detect either of these effects would depend on the temperature and length of time the mash had to wait. To minimize both, I would try to heat the mash to 168 °F (76 °C) before proceeding with recirculation (assuming you don't already do this). That will stop the enzymes. Also, the extra heat might slow down the Lactobacillus bacteria, though it won't kill them. When you sparge, collect the wort in your kettle and start heating the kettle as soon as the bottom is covered. That will kill off the Lactobacillus as soon as possible -- they can't survive much over 180 °F (82 °C).
I'm not sure why your interrupted boil gave less hop utilization than normal. I don't know of any experiments along these lines in the literature. It may be that the abnormal heating and cooling cycle resulted in more precipitation of hop resins with the trub in the kettle. You now know that, if it happens again, you will have to add more hops when you restart the boil. The haze may be related to precipitated matter redissolving when the cooled wort was brought back to a boil.
These effects seem like good reasons to avoid interrupting and resuming the boil. You might be better off just cutting it a little short, if need be.
Pressure-cooking barley. Pressure-cooking barley is a dangerous way to make a stout. The stuff will gum up your mash, as you found out. It may also gum up the relief valve and the outlet nozzle (the little nipple that the rocking weight rests on) of the pressure cooker itself. If that happens, your kitchen utensil could become a fragmentation grenade.
The set mash, and the haziness and high gravity of the finished beer, point to an incomplete conversion of the carbohydrates from the barley in the mash tun. The gummy starch material plugged the mash filter bed and also got washed into your kettle and eventually ended up in the finished beer. The fermentation was not the problem -- though you did overpitch. Next time, try using brewer's flaked barley and I bet you will have no trouble.
Enzyme activities and temperature. The enzyme activity during the cool-down of your mash is not the same as during heat-up. In fact, my guess is that you could cut your saccharification rest to 1 h or less without having any effect on the fermentability of your wort. This is because b-amylase (which makes maltose) can survive for only a limited time at high temperatures, and the higher you heat the mash at the beginning of the saccharification rest, the shorter its survival will be. It is impossible to predict exactly, because enzyme survival depends on the thickness of the mash and other factors as well as temperature. If you want a highly fermentable wort, however, you must keep the mash temperature on the low end of the saccharification range so that the b-amylase has time to do its work.
References
(1) Dave Miller, "Mashing and Protein Rests, Dry Hopping, False Bottom Materials, and Single-Infusion vs. Step and Decoction Mashing," BrewingTechniques 2 (5), 16-21 (1994).
(2) Jim Busch, "Lautering for Highest Extract Efficiency," BrewingTechniques 3 (3), 22-25 (1995).
(3) Dave Miller, Continental Pilsener (Brewers Publications, Boulder, Colorado, 1990).
(4) Randy Mosher, The Brewer's Companion (Alephenalia Publications, Seattle, 1994).
(5) John Palmer, "Brazing and Welding 304L Stainless Steel," BrewingTechniques 2 (6), 50-55 (1994).
(6) Charlie Papazian, The New Complete Joy of Home Brewing (Avon Books, New York, 1984), pp. 331-332.