Boiling
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Ingredients
Recipe
Mashing
Sparging
Boiling
Cooling
Fermentation
Finishing

Boiling the Wort

There are a number of reasons to boil the wort:

bulletextracts flavour & bitterness from the hops
bulletsterilises the wort to prevent infection
bulletclears protein debris from the wort (the 'hot break')

The last of these is worth further mention. The wort from the sparger is full of all sorts of bits and pieces of protein matter extracted from the grains or produced by reactions in the mash tun. If these were left in the beer, they would cause hazes and off-flavours.

Boiling causes these particles to clump together (coagulate) and sink to the bottom of the boiler during the 'stand'. During the run off they are left behind in the boiler as so-called 'hot trub'.

Hot trub left in the boiler after the 'run off'

 

 

To successfully 'coagulate' the proteins and extract bittering acids from the hops takes around 1 - 1½ hrs of vigorous boiling.

 

 

My Old Boiler

I use a Thorne boiler with the thermostat removed and the element supplied from a variac, so that the heat can be adjusted to get a perfect boil:

My boiling schedule is as follows:

bulletBoil for 15 minutes
bulletAdd bittering hops
bulletBoil for one hour
bulletAdd late hops & a 
teaspoon of irish moss
bulletBoil for 15 minutes
bulletSwitch off boiler
bulletLet the wort stand for
 20-30 minutes