herbie53 wrote:recipe calls for munich LME but cant find any for whatever reason. ive been told that theres no good substitute for it and not to use pale or light LME. any suggestions on where to find it or what would be a suitable replacement?
herbie53 wrote:recipe calls for munich LME but cant find any for whatever reason. ive been told that theres no good substitute for it and not to use pale or light LME. any suggestions on where to find it or what would be a suitable replacement?
hallclosetbrewingco wrote:i would use light dme and then use a grain bag to steep a pound or two of munich and any other grains.

siwelwerd wrote:hallclosetbrewingco wrote:i would use light dme and then use a grain bag to steep a pound or two of munich and any other grains.
Then you wouldn't get much flavor from the Munich at all. Munich, unlike crystal malts, needs to be mashed for the starches to convert.
linuxelf wrote:I have to disagree. It's the enzymes that break down the starches into sugars. If you do a steep, your enzymes are too diluted with water, and they cannot convert the starches to sugars. You'll get color, and you may get flavor, but you won't get sugars from steeping.
Quin wrote:Williams Brewing sells a 50% pils/50% Munich LME. http://www.williamsbrewing.com/GERMAN_G ... 362C99.cfm If you are using one of Jamils recipes, they assume 100% Munich LME. So if the recipe calls for 1# of Munich LME, you would use 2# of the Williams Gold LME extract to get the amount of Munich. Don't forget to reduce the other LME in the recipe by one pound also.

hallclosetbrewingco wrote:so i see you didnt read my post. nobody is trying to get the sugars out of the munich.( eventhough you do get some from steeping and a lot more if you use the right amount of h2o . 1 to 1.25 qts per pound) again, the idea is to capture the personality of the munich. to give the beer drinker the feeling that they are drinking a beer that was made of munich. creative diseption is what i like to call it. like i said before the extract is the main source of fermentables. so you dont have to be too concerned with extraction rate. the wort will ferment without a doubt.linuxelf wrote:I have to disagree. It's the enzymes that break down the starches into sugars. If you do a steep, your enzymes are too diluted with water, and they cannot convert the starches to sugars. You'll get color, and you may get flavor, but you won't get sugars from steeping.

hallclosetbrewingco wrote:so i see you didnt read my post. nobody is trying to get the sugars out of the munich.( eventhough you do get some from steeping and a lot more if you use the right amount of h2o . 1 to 1.25 qts per pound) again, the idea is to capture the personality of the munich. to give the beer drinker the feeling that they are drinking a beer that was made of munich. creative diseption is what i like to call it. like i said before the extract is the main source of fermentables. so you dont have to be too concerned with extraction rate. the wort will ferment without a doubt.linuxelf wrote:I have to disagree. It's the enzymes that break down the starches into sugars. If you do a steep, your enzymes are too diluted with water, and they cannot convert the starches to sugars. You'll get color, and you may get flavor, but you won't get sugars from steeping.
In your post you said:you can still get flavor and your sugars out of the grains weather you steep in a bag or mash in a tun. it all about temprature.

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