Question Brewsters,
I started brewing a few weeks ago and already brewed 2 batches (their success has yet to be determined). I have a smaller kettle so the boils are from concentrate (2-2.5 gallons). My question is.. why would I ever want to boil a smaller concentrate if I have the room to say boil 3 gallons vs 2 or 2.5 like the recipe calls for. Does the larger concentrate (smaller boil) impact the effectiveness of the isomerisation of the alpha acids because a larger concentrate of sugars makes it more difficult for the alpha acids to dissolve? Looking at a hop utilization chart this seems to be the case (higher gravity --> decreased hop utilization). Going forward.. I think it would make sense to boil as much as possible in my kettle.. and then post cool down of the wort add the difference to make a 5 gallon batch.
Also seems logical when straining the concentrate from the kettle to the fermenting bucket that I would lose some concentrate.. and the smaller the concentrate the more watered down the final product. I guess I could compensate by adding more hops...or maybe I'm over analyzing this negligible impact.
Appreciate your thoughts.

