Torriefied wheat and torriefied wheat malt

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Right been to love brewing in Liverpool, wanted a 25kg of maris otter but they have none till Thursday so bought 2 3kg bags, 1kg of munich some hops target 100g ekg 100g, whirlfloch tabs, forgot to get flaked oats, will normal porridge oats do the same job
 
I'm not sure there is any such thing as torrified wheat malt: it's either torrified wheat (which is unmalted wheat made into a form suitable for mashing) or wheat malt. Which was the later recipe?
 
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Right been to love brewing in Liverpool, wanted a 25kg of maris otter but they have none till Thursday so bought 2 3kg bags, 1kg of munich some hops target 100g ekg 100g, whirlfloch tabs, forgot to get flaked oats, will normal porridge oats do the same job
Target is a nice bittering hop (dual use actually), EKG always good to have in the fridge. Pellets or leaf?
Whirlflock, I assume they work, I use Irish moss, other people use gelatine, or cold-crashing, or whirlpooling.
About them oats, not sure what essentially the difference is, but I'd be a little bit cautious, they're quite sticky and might screw up the sparge bed.
 
Right been to love brewing in Liverpool, wanted a 25kg of maris otter but they have none till Thursday so bought 2 3kg bags, 1kg of munich some hops target 100g ekg 100g, whirlfloch tabs, forgot to get flaked oats, will normal porridge oats do the same job
Good old Quaker oats or any other brand is the same as flaked oats- amd possibly cheaper.
I see your recipe calls for <4% flaked oats. That won't cause you any problems with sparging, but it's a bit of an unusual adjunct in a bitter. They can affect the mouthfeel, by making it sort of velvety rather than crisp. Nice in a stout or porter, not sure about bitter.
 
I assume you mean the soft groundup oats? Not the crunchy crispy ones? And how many % would you advise?

Asking for a friend with head retention problems wink...
Absolutely- just oats with no additives- porridge oats, in fact. Certainly not muesli. Didn't expect to see them in a bitter recipe, though. I think they might work against head retention.
 
Good old Quaker oats or any other brand is the same as flaked oats- amd possibly cheaper.
I see your recipe calls for <4% flaked oats. That won't cause you any problems with sparging, but it's a bit of an unusual adjunct in a bitter. They can affect the mouthfeel, by making it sort of velvety rather than crisp. Nice in a stout or porter, not sure about bitter.
Its not really a bitter An, just my first brew, brewmate asked for a style so I choose bitter
 
Hi all just remembered my mash bag hasn't arrived yet ?, my kettle has a mesh plate in the bottom and a bazooka on the tap can i mash this way ie heat strike water put the grain in after the hour drain into empty fv then sparge with the kettle tap open into the fv, clean the kettle transfer wort back to kettle and boil adding the hops at required times and whirlfloc tablet. sounds like a ball ache to me, maybe I should wait till bag gets here aheadbuttaheadbutt everything is ready just no bag :mad::mad:
 
Should work, what would you have done different if you HAD the mash bag? Not much?

I use both: ordinary pan (20 liter, ordinary...), heat water to 73º (about), insert bag (attach around the edge), insert grains, check temp again, wait an hour, and lift the whole bag (leaving it to drip a bit, otherwise too heavy) and deposit the whole bag into the fv where a mesh plate awaits on the bottom.
Sparge until done, then heat the pan until boiling and then boil for an hour. Hops etc bla.

Why the bag? Less of a mess. Necessary? Not quite, just very convenient.
Can you wait another day or 2? Then wait. Brewing is waiting anyway.
 
Make pics a lot, even if it's just a way to reflect on what you did. And share the pics, always willing here to provide feedback. And read page 42 and 43 again. Good luck and good night!
 
Personally I would leave out the oats, it doesn't fit with the style or with your other ingredients.
You're brewing what is essentially a summer pale ale with those hops and grains. Oats is more of a heavy/stout type of thing. A pale golden ale type thing should be clear and crisp. Let the malt shine and leave it as MO and Munich
Touch of target for bittering and EKG for flavour, can't go wrong pal.
Just don't be tempted To "add a bit more" with target, as it's a bit of a thug and takes a while to mellow out.
 
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