Taxy wrote:I did the mash yesterday, so I was too late to read about TB's suggested experiment.
Mash steps:
- added 4,5 kg oat malt to 18l water of 66°C - 1 hour
- heated mash to 85°C
- added 1kg rolled oats and AA enzyme - 1 hour
- cooled to 56°C, ph was 5.4 so ok for amyloglucanase enzyme - 1 hour
- sparged with about 8l of water.
When I added the rolled oats, the mash did turn quite thick but it quickly thinned out with the AA enzyme. The water cycling in the Grainfather never got stuck. Also the sparging went well. I guess the 4,5kg of (husked) malted oats made the mash loose enough for the 1kg of rolled oats. The wash tasted very sweet, almost like honey.
I was disappointed though with the SG. When the wash cooled to 25°C, I only had an SG of 1.034 (25 liters - 5,5kg of grains in total). I had hoped for a higher conversion because I first used the natural malt enzymes and then the extra enzymes (which worked well in a recent mashing).
Possible causes:
- Oat doesn't contain that much starch? I know there is less than in barley but I do not really know how much less.
- The rests had to be longer?
- I noticed that the oat malt husks are different from barley malt. When I milled them with my two-roller mill, the husks didn't crack while the inside kernels had been broken up well. Perhaps I should have cut the oat malts with a bladed mixer instead of milling them?
There's a a chart of yield (PPG) by grain type on the parent site
here.
I just found
this. The study is 7 years old and some of the results are interesting:
1) malt extract yield from malted oats is 62% vs 83% for barley. Under ideal mash conditions, the extract yield test for malted oats raised to 76%.
2) the study tested fermentability of malted oat wort over 8 different mashing regimes, concluding that a rest at 62C (143F) promoted the highest degree of fermentation.
3) mashing in at 35C (95F) was advantageous by 'pre-gelatenizing' enzymes that are then readily available when they get into optimum conversion range.
4) the test revealed that mashing by slowly raising mash temperature throughout the range (35C, 45C and 62C) did not convert as fully as the mashes that had distinct rest (temperature hold) periods.
So..... according to this study, malted oats benefit from rests, contrary to what the beer guys are saying.