Hi, I've just started out home brewing. How fascinating and educational! Can someone pse explain further why it is good to boil the wort in water for an hour before putting into the fermenter? From Oliver & Geoff's site, quote:
1. Add the malt, sugar, glucose or other soluble ingredients and bring the contents back to the boil. Be careful, especially with liquid malt, that the ingredients do not catch on the bottom of the pan. Boiling the malt extract (there's no need to boil the other sugars)for at least an hour is a good idea, as it causes protein, which can cause hazy beer, to come out of solution.
What is the meaning of the sentence: "which can cause hazy beer, to come out of solution".
Also, it says (there's no need to boil the other sugars). Does this mean that you don't dissolve the dextrose in the boiling pot with the canned beer malt? When is the dextrose then mixed in?
Can someone recommend a practical, good beginner's home brew book?
Cheers
RobRoy
How to brew - Oliver & Geoofs web site question
How to brew - Oliver & Geoofs web site question
I'll just have one beer... then another and then...
what it means is that boiling the malt extract will remove the protein from the solution. if this isn't done, the protein can cause hazy beer. hoping that you were just after a rewording, and not a technical explanationRobRoy wrote:1. Add the malt, sugar, glucose or other soluble ingredients and bring the contents back to the boil. Be careful, especially with liquid malt, that the ingredients do not catch on the bottom of the pan. Boiling the malt extract (there's no need to boil the other sugars)for at least an hour is a good idea, as it causes protein, which can cause hazy beer, to come out of solution.
What is the meaning of the sentence: "which can cause hazy beer, to come out of solution".

chris
Leigh, Thanks.
I have just done my first batch and this is from a Brewcraft Kit which consisted of Munich Lager Liquid Malt (in a can), Yeast Sachet, Dextrose, MG No rinse Sanitizer & Carbonation drops. I bought the complete starter kit as I was just starting out and the kit contained all the basic equipment and ingredients for a brew. For my next brew I have bought a can of ESB English Ale, Safale S-04 Yeast & Goldings finishing Hops. The recipe on the can does not include boiling the Malt but just says to add it to 4 Litres of boiling water in a fermenter. I would like to boil it but wasnt sure when to add the dextrose.
Reading from John Palmers on line version "How to brew", Dextrose is never mentioned and yet it seems like most recipes include about 1 Kilo of Dextrose.
I have just done my first batch and this is from a Brewcraft Kit which consisted of Munich Lager Liquid Malt (in a can), Yeast Sachet, Dextrose, MG No rinse Sanitizer & Carbonation drops. I bought the complete starter kit as I was just starting out and the kit contained all the basic equipment and ingredients for a brew. For my next brew I have bought a can of ESB English Ale, Safale S-04 Yeast & Goldings finishing Hops. The recipe on the can does not include boiling the Malt but just says to add it to 4 Litres of boiling water in a fermenter. I would like to boil it but wasnt sure when to add the dextrose.
Reading from John Palmers on line version "How to brew", Dextrose is never mentioned and yet it seems like most recipes include about 1 Kilo of Dextrose.
I'll just have one beer... then another and then...
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RobRoy,
Read all the stickys on this forum, especially the Basic Brewing instructions. It will give you a good dot point list of what to do. My suggestion is to forget boiling any of your ingredients if using a Kit and kilo of malt or dex/sugar. none of them contain enough proteins that will haze your beer as they would have been removed if they are good quality kits. Boiling is more for partial/all grain brewers. Read Palmer etc for a more technical understanding.
Read all the stickys on this forum, especially the Basic Brewing instructions. It will give you a good dot point list of what to do. My suggestion is to forget boiling any of your ingredients if using a Kit and kilo of malt or dex/sugar. none of them contain enough proteins that will haze your beer as they would have been removed if they are good quality kits. Boiling is more for partial/all grain brewers. Read Palmer etc for a more technical understanding.
Sounds like Beer O'clock.
If excluding Dextrose from the recipe, should you then use 2 cans of Liquid Malt extract?OldBugman wrote:RobRoy wrote: yet it seems like most recipes include about 1 Kilo of Dextrose.
Best bit of advice, get over the use of dextrose and use all malt.
Ofcourse dextrose does have it's place in brewing but it seems to be a fixation with new brewers to use it as the bulk additive.
I'll just have one beer... then another and then...