Craft Beer & Brewing Magazine

STEP mash your Way to a Dry Finish

- By Taylor Caron

So it’s getting warmer out, and you’re itching to brew a summer beer with a super-dry finish that begs for another refill? Instead of bumping up the simple sugar adjuncts in the recipe, try a step mash.

ONE OF THE MAIN

reasons a lot of homebrewer­s make the leap from extract to all-grain brewing is to have more control over the wort sugar profile. When we begin making our own wort, there are a handful of grain-native enzymes we can manipulate to influence the finished beer, but with today’s modern malts, we can put most of our attention on the “saccharify­ing” enzymes, alpha and beta amylase.

These two enzymes break down (hydrolyze) our grist’s amylopecti­n and amylose starches into smaller and more fermentabl­e sugars, but they work in different ways. Alpha amylase cleaves these long starch chains somewhat indiscrimi­nately into randomly smaller carbohydra­tes and is happiest in the 160–168°F (71–76°C) range. Beta amylase can work on only one end of the starch chain, prefers a temperatur­e of 140–150°F (60–66°C), and falls apart (denatures) well before alpha amylase’s preferred temperatur­e range. With a much more limited location of activity, beta amylase also works much more slowly than its alpha sibling. Luckily, there is enough overlap in the working ranges that we can expect good results by mashing in the 148–154°F (64–68°C) range, with the lower end giving us a bit more fermentabl­e sugars than the higher end.

Let’s say that it’s brew day, and you’ve got your alpha amylase chopping those long starch chains up willy-nilly and your beta amylase nibbling the ends into fermentabl­e sugars, working happily together at the low end of the normal mash range (148°F/64°C), and maybe you’re planning an extra twenty minutes of rest to make sure the job is complete. Great! You will definitely make beer, and it will likely be quite fermentabl­e with a low finishing gravity, but there is more you can do!

If you really want to maximize the fermentabi­lity of your wort, you need a multistep temperatur­e mash (step mash, for short). I’m sure you’ve heard of it, but maybe you haven’t quite mustered the courage to dive in. I am here to tell you it isn’t hard, and you might even have a bit of fun with it.

Step Mash in Practice

If you happen to have a direct-fire mash tun, to perform a step mash, you can simply dough in on the low end of beta amylase

(as in activity (138°F/59°C), let it rest for 20 or 30 minutes, then slowly 2°F/1°C a minute!) add heat until you get to the 150–152°F (66–67°C) range for another 20 minutes, then again heat up through the high end of alpha amylase activity (168°F/76°C). This sort of mash profile has proven to make very fermentabl­e wort, but it requires almost constant stirring to prevent scorching and to give the enzymes a more consistent temperatur­e throughout the mash tun.

If, like most of us, you are using an insulated cooler as your mash tun, you’ll need to use infusions of near-boiling water to heat the mash through the steps, but the effects are comparable (and you don’t need to worry about scorching). The

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