This method describes how to mill grain or malt to produce fine or coarse grist.
Malt intended for use in beer brewing or elsewhere in the food industry
Malt is ground between two horizontally positioned, grooved discs. The lower disc is driven by an electric motor and rotates at approx. 1500 rpm; the upper disc is fixed and therefore does not move. During the milling process, the malt migrates from the center of the discs to the outer edge, where the grist falls through an outlet spout into a grist beaker.
The gap between the discs can be adjusted by turning a socket head screw on a calibrated ring bearing scale markings. The scale on the calibrated ring ranges from 0 to 20, with each scale division corresponding to a gap between the discs of 0.10 mm. Each scale division is subdivided into five smaller divisions; each of the smaller marks is equivalent to 0.02 mm. Two gap adjusting rings ensure reproducible mill settings.
Barley malt intended for use in beer brewing or elsewhere in the food industry
High-molecular weight dextrins and starch present in the wort extracted from brewery spent grains are precipitated through the addition of ethanol, centrifuged and dissolved in phosphate buffer, followed by the addition of an iodine solution. Depending upon the molecular weight and degree of branching, a red to blue color forms, the intensity of which is measured spectrophotometrically at 578 nm.
The compounds in the malt dissolved in the mash liquor during a standardized mashing process using finely ground malt (fine grist) are determined in this analysis.
Malt intended for use in beer brewing or elsewhere in the food industry
The Congress mash method primarily serves to determine the extract content of malt.
The extract content is determined by the weight ratio sL 20/20 of the wort on the basis of the official sugar tables (Plato tables) at 20 °C. sL 20/20 stands for the weight ratio of a volume of wort at 20 °C to the same volume of water at the same temperature.
Furthermore, the following is tested over the course of this analysis: Iodine test (saccharification time), odor of the mash, wort run-off, clarity of the filtered wort; the Congress wort is also used as a basis for a wide variety of further analyses.