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Extract Brewing

1 byte added, 22:13, 10 January 2017
* Priming sugar is added to the finished beer and it is [[Bottling|bottled]] or [[Kegging|kegged]] for consumption
<div id="steepinggrains"></div>===Steeping Grains===</div>
Extract brewers often steep specialty grains (such as caramel or roasted malts) before the boil to add color, flavor and body to the beer. Similar to [[Mashing|mashing]], steeping adds fermentable sugars to the brew, and the addition of steeped grains can provide a large variety of flavors and colors to your extract brew. The steeping process is done before the boil. Grains are typically put in a steeping bag and immersed in the brewing water. Alternatively they can be steeped in a separate pot while the main boil is being prepared. The water is raised to 150-170F (65-75C) and held for 30 minutes. Unlike mashing though, keeping the temperature constant is not as important for steeping, as there is no enzyme activity occurring with specialty grain. The grain bag is then removed, and malt extract and hops added to the resulting tea to continue with the normal extract boiling process. Be aware that not all grains are suitable for steeping. Many malts like pale malt, munich malt, wheat malts, some specialty malts as well as most flaked ingredients must be mashed to impart their full body and flavor.
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