
BDawg wrote:Astringency is usually sparge related. IMO, you should treat your HLT so that you are sparging with the same
water that you use to mash.
Check your temp and pH while sparging. It should never get above 170F and it should stay below 5.8 pH.
Also check your gravity when sparging. It should not get below about 2.5 brix (1.010)
If you hit those numbers and haven't hit your volume yet, then you should
stop your sparge and top up with plain water and/or DME to hit target gravity.
Adjust your recipe to add more base malt for the next time you brew that batch (and re-calc your efficiency given those pH and gravity limits).
HTH-
brewinhard wrote:What you are describing most likely sounds like over-sparging. If you don't have the astringency problem with your 1.070 beer but with a smaller 1.052 beer, then the extra grain involved in producing the stronger batch is giving you more grains to work with for the same amount of runoff to collect. In your 1.052 beer, you are still collecting the same amount of runoff but with less grains. As the sugars are rinsed out more thoroughly in the smaller beer, the pH will rise in your grainbed as the buffering capacity of the grains gets diluted with the extra sparge water used to collect your necessary boil levels.
As Bdawg stated, your best bet would be to check your runoff gravity and stop it when it hits around 1.012 or so (just to be safe). You would then need to use the rest of your sparge water to top off the remaining volume in your boil kettle. I ran in to this issue to before modifying my sparging technique.
BN Army // 13th Mountain Division 

Ozwald wrote:That larger grainbed is also going to provide a nice buffer, making it a little harder for the straight RO to change the pH. It will eventually happen, but it takes a lot longer.
Your runoff should be slow enough where you can collect a measurable sample, put the hydro jar in an ice bath & the large surface area will allow you to drop the temp pretty quickly to a correctable range. 1 point isn't going to be super critical at that point, so dropping it below 85F/30C should be good enough (but still run it through a calculator).
BDawg wrote:Astringency is usually sparge related. IMO, you should treat your HLT so that you are sparging with the same
water that you use to mash.
Check your temp and pH while sparging. It should never get above 170F and it should stay below 5.8 pH.
Also check your gravity when sparging. It should not get below about 2.5 brix (1.010)
If you hit those numbers and haven't hit your volume yet, then you should
stop your sparge and top up with plain water and/or DME to hit target gravity.
Adjust your recipe to add more base malt for the next time you brew that batch (and re-calc your efficiency given those pH and gravity limits).
HTH-
bustdbrewing wrote:
I can normally brew a 1.071 beer without issue using the same techniques. I use RO water and normally throw all salts into the mash tun and then sparge with RO water. Any ideas what is it would be become an issue now on a smaller beer?
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