Mash slowing down?
Moderator: Site Moderator
Mash slowing down?
The facts: My first ever mash; Now is hour 60 since DADY added to a 18 lb each cracked and milled corn and sugar 13 gall water mash. The mix seems to be slowing down in its CO2 production but the smell is good. Temp is dropping from 88 yesterday to 80 right now. I was giving it a stir once in a while but have stopped. Mash is in a 20 gallon plastic garbage can (NSF2). I do not know the SG or ABV as my brix hasn't arrived yet.
Question - do I need to add sugar or a little more yeast? I'd like to distill at day 6.
Question - do I need to add sugar or a little more yeast? I'd like to distill at day 6.
- still_stirrin
- Master of Distillation
- Posts: 10371
- Joined: Tue Mar 18, 2014 7:01 am
- Location: where the buffalo roam, and the deer & antelope play
Re: Mash slowing down?
“Patience is the hardest thing to put into the bottle”.
Wait for it to finish. Don’t add more sugar, let the yeast finish what they’ve got.
ss
Wait for it to finish. Don’t add more sugar, let the yeast finish what they’ve got.
ss
My LM/VM & Potstill: My build thread
My Cadco hotplate modification thread: Hotplate Build
My stock pot gin still: stock pot potstill
My 5-grain Bourbon recipe: Special K
My Cadco hotplate modification thread: Hotplate Build
My stock pot gin still: stock pot potstill
My 5-grain Bourbon recipe: Special K
- Tabucowboy
- Swill Maker
- Posts: 153
- Joined: Thu Mar 21, 2019 10:11 am
- Location: By God WV
Re: Mash slowing down?
Is your SG still going down? If so I would just leave it and let it ferment out.
As long as your SG is dropping you are still producing alcohol.
It may be slowing down also cause of the temperature. DADY produces fastest at 90 degrees , but I believe you do not want to get it much higher than 100.
I have also read it produces more ABV at lower temps but takes longer.
As long as your SG is dropping you are still producing alcohol.
It may be slowing down also cause of the temperature. DADY produces fastest at 90 degrees , but I believe you do not want to get it much higher than 100.
I have also read it produces more ABV at lower temps but takes longer.
CM Reflux Still -- Copper mesh 16" ,column 31" tall, dia. 2",temp at boiler,top of column, power - PAC w5500w Element
Pot Still -- Copper mesh 16",column, 23" tall dia. 2", temp at boiler, power - PAC w5500w Element
Pot Still -- Copper mesh 16",column, 23" tall dia. 2", temp at boiler, power - PAC w5500w Element
Re: Mash slowing down?
Walshie, unfortunately you don't really get to dictate when a mash / wash is ready to distill, it will finish when it finishes and not before. I'd suggest NOT adding anything else, especially more sugar. This does not appear to be a T&T recipe, so the results of 'seat of the pants' washes / mashes can be unpredictable.
You are about 2-1/2 days onto fermentation on a wash that should have started around a very reasonable SG of 1.064. It may well be attenuating normally and when it does the activity slows down. When I do a sugar wash it starts at about an SG of 1.075 and takes about 5 days for it to become largely still. I give the wash about a week, rack off the trub and allow another week to settle, though kept under cover it will keep much longer. You also did not mention adding any other nutrients and adding some yeast nutrient / energizer is beneficial.
Your corn will add flavour only, since you did not gelatinize it and did not mash with any enzymes.
No need to stir or continually poke a fermentation, it can actual be detrimental. I give a good stir when it is time to degas but not until then.
My best advice is let this finish out as-is since you don't yet have any tools. Give a small sample a taste, it should not have much if any sweetness and feel quite dry in the mouth when it is done. I like to allow a wash to settle out quite a bit, last one sat for a month due to life getting in the way and it was water clear when it came time to distill. Made some of the cleanest neutral to date. Patience is rewarded.
You are about 2-1/2 days onto fermentation on a wash that should have started around a very reasonable SG of 1.064. It may well be attenuating normally and when it does the activity slows down. When I do a sugar wash it starts at about an SG of 1.075 and takes about 5 days for it to become largely still. I give the wash about a week, rack off the trub and allow another week to settle, though kept under cover it will keep much longer. You also did not mention adding any other nutrients and adding some yeast nutrient / energizer is beneficial.
Your corn will add flavour only, since you did not gelatinize it and did not mash with any enzymes.
No need to stir or continually poke a fermentation, it can actual be detrimental. I give a good stir when it is time to degas but not until then.
My best advice is let this finish out as-is since you don't yet have any tools. Give a small sample a taste, it should not have much if any sweetness and feel quite dry in the mouth when it is done. I like to allow a wash to settle out quite a bit, last one sat for a month due to life getting in the way and it was water clear when it came time to distill. Made some of the cleanest neutral to date. Patience is rewarded.
Last edited by zed255 on Tue Jul 21, 2020 12:11 pm, edited 1 time in total.
----------
Zed
When the Student is ready, the Master will appear.
If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough.
Zed
When the Student is ready, the Master will appear.
If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough.
Re: Mash slowing down?
I found the recipe here: https://moonshinerecipe.org/corn-mash-moonshine Its 7 lbs cracked corn, 7 lbs sugar, 5 gallons water and 10 grams DADY.
I used a cracked corn I bought at TSC, and put that through a grain mill to make it a little finer and get some flour out of it.
In reviewing what I copied, it says let it sit for 14 days.
So if its still bubbling its still fermenting and Let It Ride (BTO)
I used a cracked corn I bought at TSC, and put that through a grain mill to make it a little finer and get some flour out of it.
In reviewing what I copied, it says let it sit for 14 days.
So if its still bubbling its still fermenting and Let It Ride (BTO)
Re: Mash slowing down?
Check out a Uncle Jesse's Simple Sour Mash recipe here in the Tried and True recipe section.
I followed your link and the site hurt my head and I left before really finding the recipe. There is lots of crap out there on the Wild Wild Web, try a few well regarded recipes here and you will be a better judge of when something is less than optimal.
And yes, just let this one ride.
I followed your link and the site hurt my head and I left before really finding the recipe. There is lots of crap out there on the Wild Wild Web, try a few well regarded recipes here and you will be a better judge of when something is less than optimal.
And yes, just let this one ride.
----------
Zed
When the Student is ready, the Master will appear.
If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough.
Zed
When the Student is ready, the Master will appear.
If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough.
Re: Mash slowing down?
BTW, thanks all for advice
- jonnys_spirit
- Master of Distillation
- Posts: 3914
- Joined: Wed Oct 21, 2015 7:58 am
- Location: The Milky Way
Re: Mash slowing down?
I stir mine and punch down the cap a couple three times daily to keep the grains mixed in the wort and extracting flavor. Sorta like making tea. Rack off and squeeze the liquid as it approaches 1.000 SG and let it finish, clear, and degas in carboys then rack off sediment and strip it.
Good luck! Love the smell of a good ferment in the morning!
Cheers,
jonny
Good luck! Love the smell of a good ferment in the morning!
Cheers,
jonny
————
i prefer my mash shaken, not stirred
————
i prefer my mash shaken, not stirred
————
Re: Mash slowing down?
Get you a specific gravity hydrometer and a proof & trall alcohol hydrometer. You will need both hydrometers.
Homer
Homer
[align=][/align]Stay strapped or get clapped.
15.5 gallon boiler, 5 gallon thumper, shotgun condenser, 57” spiraled liebig,
mash steam cooker head, 5.5 kW element with SCR controller
All modular
15.5 gallon boiler, 5 gallon thumper, shotgun condenser, 57” spiraled liebig,
mash steam cooker head, 5.5 kW element with SCR controller
All modular
Re: Mash slowing down?
I suggest a beer / wine hydrometer as well. The refractometer is useless without an accurate OG reading and a conversion calculation after fermentation is started. The old school hydrometer will more easily tell you where a ferment is at once started.
----------
Zed
When the Student is ready, the Master will appear.
If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough.
Zed
When the Student is ready, the Master will appear.
If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough.
-
- Master of Distillation
- Posts: 3387
- Joined: Thu Dec 01, 2016 6:27 pm
- Location: Ontario
Re: Mash slowing down?
You are doing a sugar wash, even thorough you have added some corn.. the corn will only provide some flavor and a bit of nutrients for the yeast..
I would be very suspect that the Ph is way off.. have you checked the Ph of the wash.. sugar wash, even with some grains added, are known for a acid drop..
Mars
I would be very suspect that the Ph is way off.. have you checked the Ph of the wash.. sugar wash, even with some grains added, are known for a acid drop..
Mars
" I know quite certainly that I myself have no special talent. Curiosity, Obsession and dogged endurance, combined with self-criticism, have brought me to my knowledge and understanding "
– Albert Einstein
– Albert Einstein
Re: Mash slowing down?
Sorry StillerBoy no pH meter in the house. Another tool from Amazon is now on order (my wife is killing me); Brix comes today sometime.StillerBoy wrote: ↑Tue Jul 21, 2020 12:39 pm You are doing a sugar wash, even thorough you have added some corn.. the corn will only provide some flavor and a bit of nutrients for the yeast..
I would be very suspect that the Ph is way off.. have you checked the Ph of the wash.. sugar wash, even with some grains added, are known for a acid drop..
Mars
An update - mash has stopped gassing, slightly sour taste (so pH is dropping); temp dropped to 77. So the 14 days from the recipe to distilling nowhere near accurate.
When Amazon arrives I'll update the ABV/SG.
Re: Mash slowing down?
The recipe I used is same as UJ; just bigger proportions. I'm going to follow his method for second/third etc ferment and distillation scaled up to 8 gallon wash which is the size of my pot.zed255 wrote: ↑Tue Jul 21, 2020 7:50 am Check out a Uncle Jesse's Simple Sour Mash recipe here in the Tried and True recipe section.
I followed your link and the site hurt my head and I left before really finding the recipe. There is lots of crap out there on the Wild Wild Web, try a few well regarded recipes here and you will be a better judge of when something is less than optimal.
And yes, just let this one ride.
-
- Master of Distillation
- Posts: 3387
- Joined: Thu Dec 01, 2016 6:27 pm
- Location: Ontario
Re: Mash slowing down?
SG is dropping, the sugars are being used up, not about acidity (Ph), which is something completely different..
It is best to ferment at a stable temperature.. by allowing the temp to drop, it will prolong the fermentation duration.. yeast like it best when temp are stable, for baker's yeast 85*F is best..
That's just to cover their butt..
Mars
" I know quite certainly that I myself have no special talent. Curiosity, Obsession and dogged endurance, combined with self-criticism, have brought me to my knowledge and understanding "
– Albert Einstein
– Albert Einstein
- jonnys_spirit
- Master of Distillation
- Posts: 3914
- Joined: Wed Oct 21, 2015 7:58 am
- Location: The Milky Way
Re: Mash slowing down?
Dissolved CO2 in the wort/wash also forms carbonic acid until it degasses which can give off a slightly acidic bite taste on the tongue - like carbonated soda.
Cheers!
-jonny
Cheers!
-jonny
————
i prefer my mash shaken, not stirred
————
i prefer my mash shaken, not stirred
————
Re: Mash slowing down?
From my new Brix refractometer that just arrived SG is 1.02 ABV 5.0. I was expecting more alcohol.
I don't know original SG.
I don't know original SG.
Re: Mash slowing down?
I mentioned in a prior post that a refractometer will not read correctly on a fermenting / fermented wash, this is why a regular hydrometer is useful. Unless you knew your exact starting gravity with the refractometer you can not now determine the final gravity with it. Calculations are required to correct your reading now.
https://www.brewersfriend.com/refractometer-calculator/
Based on the info you have given and the assumption your wash fermented dry, you are closer to 9% ABV.
Check out an online calculator:
https://www.brewersfriend.com/refractometer-calculator/
Based on the info you have given and the assumption your wash fermented dry, you are closer to 9% ABV.
----------
Zed
When the Student is ready, the Master will appear.
If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough.
Zed
When the Student is ready, the Master will appear.
If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough.
Re: Mash slowing down?
Yes upon doing a little research the brix doesn't work right now. Imma run down to my local brew house for a test.zed255 wrote: ↑Wed Jul 22, 2020 10:34 am I mentioned in a prior post that a refractometer will not read correctly on a fermenting / fermented wash, this is why a regular hydrometer is useful. Unless you knew your exact starting gravity with the refractometer you can not now determine the final gravity with it. Calculations are required to correct your reading now.
Check out an online calculator:
https://www.brewersfriend.com/refractometer-calculator/
Based on the info you have given and the assumption your wash fermented dry, you are closer to 9% ABV.
Re: Mash slowing down?
I'd just run it once allowed to clear some.
You did not have the tools to take an OG reading so knowing the FG will only tell you if it fermented dry or stopped early, which your tongue can tell you. Doesn't taste sweet means it's done. Hopefully your HBS is near by so you aren't wasting a drive.
You did not have the tools to take an OG reading so knowing the FG will only tell you if it fermented dry or stopped early, which your tongue can tell you. Doesn't taste sweet means it's done. Hopefully your HBS is near by so you aren't wasting a drive.
----------
Zed
When the Student is ready, the Master will appear.
If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough.
Zed
When the Student is ready, the Master will appear.
If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough.
-
- Master of Distillation
- Posts: 3387
- Joined: Thu Dec 01, 2016 6:27 pm
- Location: Ontario
Re: Mash slowing down?
That 5% is about right.. 18 lbs sugar in 13 gal of water give a 1.38 lbs per gal which I estimate to give about the 5 you are getting as the corn provide nothing sugar wise..
To get a high abv sugar wash, it requires about 1.5 lbs per gal for an 8 - 9% abv..
Mars
" I know quite certainly that I myself have no special talent. Curiosity, Obsession and dogged endurance, combined with self-criticism, have brought me to my knowledge and understanding "
– Albert Einstein
– Albert Einstein
Re: Mash slowing down?
noted thanksStillerBoy wrote: ↑Wed Jul 22, 2020 1:28 pmThat 5% is about right.. 18 lbs sugar in 13 gal of water give a 1.38 lbs per gal which I estimate to give about the 5 you are getting as the corn provide nothing sugar wise..
To get a high abv sugar wash, it requires about 1.5 lbs per gal for an 8 - 9% abv..
Mars
Re: Mash slowing down?
All of this speculation can be avoided by getting a cheap hydrometer and a plastic flask to measure your progress. Trust me.
I didn't have one for the first couple of months when I first started making beer way back in the 80's and it made a world of difference. Mine doesn't even require any use of math. It has the gravity reading on one side and the potential alcohol percent on the other. As long as the wash/must/wort is at 60F it reads spot-on. A little higher temps reduces the accuracy, but for home use, who cares?
When it reads 0%, you're done.
Also, as the fermentable sugars are eaten up, the ferment is always going to slow down. Just let it be. Measure every other day. Once you don't see a change for a few days, I usually use a week as me time period, you're done.
I didn't have one for the first couple of months when I first started making beer way back in the 80's and it made a world of difference. Mine doesn't even require any use of math. It has the gravity reading on one side and the potential alcohol percent on the other. As long as the wash/must/wort is at 60F it reads spot-on. A little higher temps reduces the accuracy, but for home use, who cares?
When it reads 0%, you're done.
Also, as the fermentable sugars are eaten up, the ferment is always going to slow down. Just let it be. Measure every other day. Once you don't see a change for a few days, I usually use a week as me time period, you're done.