Trouble with Efficiency

Discussion in 'Homebrewing' started by hoptualBrew, Jan 27, 2018.

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  1. hoptualBrew

    hoptualBrew Initiate (0) May 29, 2011 Florida

    Brewed today with new dome shaped false bottom. It worked great for clear wort, moreso than my old false bottom. I thought I would get better efficiency as well, as I used to get only 70%.

    Brewed SMaSH today. 5.5 gallon, 14 lbs Crisp Maris Otter. Nailed my pre boil volume 7.1 gallon, with only the dead space volume left in the MLT. 1.5 qt/lb, did mashout step, and fly sparge. Mash pH was 5.4 (with salts and some acid addition). 60 min boil. Into fermenter with 5.5 gallon. Only hit 1.055, which is 64% efficiency.

    Getting my grain online pre-crushed, I don’t have a mill.

    Frustrated, would like to hit 85% consistently, that’s my goal. Help would be appreciated, thank you.
     
  2. crcostel

    crcostel Initiate (0) Feb 26, 2006 Illinois

    Mash temp?
     
  3. Yalc

    Yalc Zealot (501) Nov 5, 2011 Florida

    What was your expected vs actual pre-boil gravity? Helps to break it down.
     
  4. hoptualBrew

    hoptualBrew Initiate (0) May 29, 2011 Florida

    Preboil was 1.048, which matched up to the 64% mash efficiency. Postboil was 1.055. Mash temp 154F.
     
  5. dmtaylor

    dmtaylor Savant (1,149) Dec 30, 2003 Wisconsin

    There's the source of your problem! You must mill it yourself, real tight gap, if you want 85% efficiency. Plain & simple.

    Cheers.
     
  6. Prep8611

    Prep8611 Savant (1,208) Aug 22, 2014 New Jersey

    Ya 85% is crazy high efficiency. I get like 60-70 percent as I'm still figuring out my mill.
     
  7. Yalc

    Yalc Zealot (501) Nov 5, 2011 Florida

    There you go. Work on your mash efficiency. Maybe mash a little longer or stir more frequently or like dmtaylor said, crush the hell out of it and use a mash bag so you don't have to worry about a stuck mash. I have found that even with a less than optimal crush I can mash a little longer (90 minutes) or stir a little more often. Just shoot for 70%. 85% is crazy high as Prep8611 said. Manage your expectations, what are you gonna save? $5 bucks or so on the grain at most going from 70 - 85%. I would just buy the extra grain and shoot for 70%. Eventually you will settle in on your efficiency with your equipment.
     
  8. billandsuz

    billandsuz Pooh-Bah (2,097) Sep 1, 2004 New York
    Pooh-Bah

    You want 85%?
    Good luck. Unlikely. Maybe some people around here claim efficiency above 80, but they are full of shit. So. Ask yourself if this goal is truly important. It's not going to make better beer but it will save a dollar of grain. Go figure.

    Trying to scratch out a few efficiency points from a home system is really an exercise in frustration imo. Anything above 70 is adequate and most folks have other areas to improve anyway. Just my opinion.
     
  9. dmtaylor

    dmtaylor Savant (1,149) Dec 30, 2003 Wisconsin

    My brewhouse efficiency currently averages 82%. It used to be 90% but I opened my mill gap slightly to avoid stuck mashes which began happening more often than I would have liked. Still happens once in a great while but not bad.

    Extent of crush of the grains is about 95% of the issue. Other efforts don't matter so much.
     
  10. VikeMan

    VikeMan Grand Pooh-Bah (3,067) Jul 12, 2009 Pennsylvania
    Pooh-Bah

    They may be full of shit in some cases, but I think most of the time when someone claims unusually high efficiencies it turns out they just don't understand how to measure and calculate properly. It's often a failure to account for a different wort volume than was expected.
     
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  11. JohnnyChicago

    JohnnyChicago Initiate (0) Sep 3, 2010 Illinois

    I used to get 90% efficiency, but dialed it back because of consistent stuck lauters and noticably less pleasant malt character. I’m at about 80% now and happy with the results.

    High efficiency mashes are certainly possible, but are scale and equipment dependent. I brew 1bbl batches with a large diameter mash tun and a grist hydrator, so I could push it to stupid efficiency if I really wanted to, but don’t because I find the effect deleterious.

    Home brewing isn’t pro brewing, and a 90%+ efficiency on a pro system may make a lovely beer. Same mash and efficiency on a small system may make a shit beer.
     
  12. hoptualBrew

    hoptualBrew Initiate (0) May 29, 2011 Florida

    So perhaps a realistic goal would be 75% then for now, oncevthat is consistent, I will try to shoot for 80%. Gonna look into getting a mill of my own.
     
  13. PortLargo

    PortLargo Pooh-Bah (1,831) Oct 19, 2012 Florida
    Pooh-Bah

    I would classify this symptom as "full of shit". [​IMG]Anyone else?
     
    #13 PortLargo, Jan 28, 2018
    Last edited: Jan 28, 2018
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  14. VikeMan

    VikeMan Grand Pooh-Bah (3,067) Jul 12, 2009 Pennsylvania
    Pooh-Bah

    I'd call it full of ignorance. Ignorance can be cured. Those who are truly full of shit (i.e. liars) are beyond help, at least beyond internet help.
     
    TooHopTooHandle likes this.
  15. minderbender

    minderbender Initiate (0) Jan 18, 2009 New York

    Might be helpful then to discuss the proper way to measure efficiency. I'll describe my method and people can let me know if I'm doing it wrong.

    I've always done it by measuring the total gravity units in my kettle when mash is done, which I believe I learned from Designing Great Beers by Ray Daniels. So for instance, if I measure 5 gallons of 1.050 wort in the kettle, I consider myself to have 250 gravity units (5 times 50 is 250—in doing this calculation, I leave off the first digit of the gravity measurement and treat the next three digits as the relevant number). Then I compare that to the maximum gravity points from my malt bill. (I think this theoretical maximum is based on a Congress mash, but I'm hazy on that part. You can look up the theoretical maxima for different fermentables, and you can also sometimes get this information from the maltster.) So for instance, if the only fermentable in my recipe were 9.25 pounds of base malt, which I assume has a theoretical maximum gravity contribution of 1.036 per pound per gallon of wort, I would figure that the theoretical maximum for my recipe was 333 gravity units (9.25 times 36). Then you just divide one by the other. 250/333 is about 75%, which I would calculate as my efficiency.

    By the way, during the boil the gravity of the wort changes as water evaporates, but obviously the sugar content does not. So you can do the exact same calculation at the end of the boil, it's just complicated by the fact that your volume now includes hops or whatever, which could throw it off a bit (which is why I always measure before the boil). So for this recipe at the end of the boil I might measure 4.5 gallons of 1.056 wort, which would correspond to 252 gravity units (the 2 extra gravity units being a rounding error).

    If I'm doing something wrong I'd welcome any input. I don't stress much about efficiency, to me it is just a useful figure in recipe formulation. For what it's worth, for mid-gravity beers I generally observe efficiency in the mid to high 70s, but lower for high-gravity beers.
     
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  16. VikeMan

    VikeMan Grand Pooh-Bah (3,067) Jul 12, 2009 Pennsylvania
    Pooh-Bah

    ^This is correct. Also, don't forget that water (and wort) volume increases when heated. It should be measured at about (or adjusted to) room temp.
     
  17. GormBrewhouse

    GormBrewhouse Pooh-Bah (2,111) Jun 24, 2015 Vermont
    Pooh-Bah

    Currently I hit around 78 to 83% effecency. In the past it was anywhere from 50 to 95% and really not truly knowing what was going on.

    Grinding grain gets me some control as does my control of sparging rate and sparge water temp.

    No need to rush brewing, and I am the run and gun Brewer.
     
  18. EvenMoreJesus

    EvenMoreJesus Initiate (0) Jun 8, 2017 Pennsylvania

    This is an excellent point. How long are you taking to sparge, @hoptualBrew?

    I'd agree, though, that a finer grind of your grist is very important.
     
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  19. hoptualBrew

    hoptualBrew Initiate (0) May 29, 2011 Florida

    It takes me about 30 minutes to runoff into boil kettle to collect ~7 gallons. Usually have the valve opened about 25%.
     
  20. GormBrewhouse

    GormBrewhouse Pooh-Bah (2,111) Jun 24, 2015 Vermont
    Pooh-Bah

    Hey, thanks. To add just make sure you don't make flour and keep the husks intact as much as possible.
     
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