What are people's thoughts on steeping fully modified rye malt, as a small addition (10%?) to an extract pale ale?
Will steeping the rye malt work?
Also... I'd like to add a small amount of Vienna malt as well... can I steep the two together? Say... for 45 mins to an hour? Or do I need a proper mash?
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Rye Pale Ale
- markaberrant
- Seasoned Drinker
- Posts: 1664
- Joined: Fri Nov 16, 2007 4:28 pm
- Location: Regina, SK
What you are describing is called mashing, sounds like a good idea to me.JesseMcG wrote:What are people's thoughts on steeping fully modified rye malt, as a small addition (10%?) to an extract pale ale?
Will steeping the rye malt work?
Also... I'd like to add a small amount of Vienna malt as well... can I steep the two together? Say... for 45 mins to an hour? Or do I need a proper mash?
So the rye malt and vienna can convert themselves, without the aid of 2 row?markaberrant wrote:What you are describing is called mashing, sounds like a good idea to me.JesseMcG wrote:What are people's thoughts on steeping fully modified rye malt, as a small addition (10%?) to an extract pale ale?
Will steeping the rye malt work?
Also... I'd like to add a small amount of Vienna malt as well... can I steep the two together? Say... for 45 mins to an hour? Or do I need a proper mash?
Yeah, I never understood steeping...
Absolutely. Just a warning: the rye doesn't have a husk (much like wheat), so it could be a sticky mash.JesseMcG wrote: So the rye malt and vienna can convert themselves, without the aid of 2 row?
- markaberrant
- Seasoned Drinker
- Posts: 1664
- Joined: Fri Nov 16, 2007 4:28 pm
- Location: Regina, SK
Mashing is about converting starch to sugar. You need enzymes to do this (ie; diastatic power). Rye malt and vienna malt have plenty of distatic power to convert themselves.JesseMcG wrote: So the rye malt and vienna can convert themselves, without the aid of 2 row?
Thanks for your replies.. I switched the vienna to munich... here's what I'm thinking for some sort of Rye APA:
5 gallon batch - half boil.
Adding the 2 lbs of DME with 5 minutes left in boil, adding the 3.3lbs of LME at start of boil.
Mash rye and munich for 45-60mins at approx 150deg.
3.3 lbs Pale Liquid Extract (48%)
2 lbs Light Dry Extract (29%)
10 oz Table Sugar (9%)
10 oz Rye Malt (9%)
6 oz Munich Malt (5%)
1 oz Centennial 60min
1 oz Centennial 5min
1 oz Citra 5min
1 oz Centennial (dry hop)
1 oz Citra (dry)
Safale US-05 Ale Yeast
Any thoughts?
Brewtarget says 38.8 IBUs, 5.2% ABV.
5 gallon batch - half boil.
Adding the 2 lbs of DME with 5 minutes left in boil, adding the 3.3lbs of LME at start of boil.
Mash rye and munich for 45-60mins at approx 150deg.
3.3 lbs Pale Liquid Extract (48%)
2 lbs Light Dry Extract (29%)
10 oz Table Sugar (9%)
10 oz Rye Malt (9%)
6 oz Munich Malt (5%)
1 oz Centennial 60min
1 oz Centennial 5min
1 oz Citra 5min
1 oz Centennial (dry hop)
1 oz Citra (dry)
Safale US-05 Ale Yeast
Any thoughts?
Brewtarget says 38.8 IBUs, 5.2% ABV.
- markaberrant
- Seasoned Drinker
- Posts: 1664
- Joined: Fri Nov 16, 2007 4:28 pm
- Location: Regina, SK
The amount of grain you are mashing is incredibly small, and will likey make very little difference.JesseMcG wrote: 3.3 lbs Pale Liquid Extract (48%)
2 lbs Light Dry Extract (29%)
10 oz Table Sugar (9%)
10 oz Rye Malt (9%)
6 oz Munich Malt (5%)
Any thoughts?
When you look at %, don't go by weight, go by potential yield. What I mean is that 1lb of LME, DME, sugar and rye malt will all contribute varying amounts of actual gravity. When you list 10oz of rye malt at 9%, it is probably closer to 4-5% by gravity. To get any discernable rye character, you'd want about 20% rye by gravity as a starting point. Same goes for the munich.
Interesting... thanks.markaberrant wrote:The amount of grain you are mashing is incredibly small, and will likey make very little difference.JesseMcG wrote: 3.3 lbs Pale Liquid Extract (48%)
2 lbs Light Dry Extract (29%)
10 oz Table Sugar (9%)
10 oz Rye Malt (9%)
6 oz Munich Malt (5%)
Any thoughts?
When you look at %, don't go by weight, go by potential yield. What I mean is that 1lb of LME, DME, sugar and rye malt will all contribute varying amounts of actual gravity. When you list 10oz of rye malt at 9%, it is probably closer to 4-5% by gravity. To get any discernable rye character, you'd want about 20% rye by gravity as a starting point. Same goes for the munich.
I'm going to drop the munich entirely and up the rye to 1.5 lbs. That brings the rye to 20% by gravity.