how long will crushed grains be usable?
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hoboscratch
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how long will crushed grains be usable?
Not sure if this is the right spot for this question, but I had a scheduled brewday back in Dec that I had canceled. I had gone through the task of crushing my grains the night before. I probably won't be brewing again until sometime in Feb so that will put it at about 2 months since the grains were crushed to mash in. Think these will still be good to go or should I crush some more? I'm doing a Belgian Wit that calls for 4.5lbs of pale malt and 4.5lbs of flaked wheat, so really i'm only looking at the 4.5lbs. That's not a huge loss to me if I have to toss it. Its being stored in a tied plastic bag in my basement, along with my other grain. Thoughts?
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brownbeard
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- Location: Cedar Rapids, IA
I have no practical experience with this and there is only one way to find out for sure, but I would think the risk here is pretty low.
First of all, plenty of all-grain brewers order their grains pre-crushed from homebrew shops. Since I've not heard of too many people complaining on forums about crushed grains going stale and ruining their beer, I would guess this isn't a big problem.
Second, you're talking about the equivalent of some grain husks and un-ground flour sitting around. What's going to go wrong with them? Have you ever had a bag of flour go stale? The only problems I've ever had along those lines are related to bugs, not oxygen.
Third, it's not as if uncracked grain is stored in oxygen impermeable bags, nor are grain husks airtight. It seems highly unlikely to me that whatever oxygen-based staling reactions are taking place could be so dramatically accelerated by the crushing process as to make them go bad in a couple of months when uncrushed grain is perfectly fine for a year or more.
What's the worst that could happen? If you brew it and it tastes terribly stale, just throw a party and pass it out after everyone is good and drunk.
First of all, plenty of all-grain brewers order their grains pre-crushed from homebrew shops. Since I've not heard of too many people complaining on forums about crushed grains going stale and ruining their beer, I would guess this isn't a big problem.
Second, you're talking about the equivalent of some grain husks and un-ground flour sitting around. What's going to go wrong with them? Have you ever had a bag of flour go stale? The only problems I've ever had along those lines are related to bugs, not oxygen.
Third, it's not as if uncracked grain is stored in oxygen impermeable bags, nor are grain husks airtight. It seems highly unlikely to me that whatever oxygen-based staling reactions are taking place could be so dramatically accelerated by the crushing process as to make them go bad in a couple of months when uncrushed grain is perfectly fine for a year or more.
What's the worst that could happen? If you brew it and it tastes terribly stale, just throw a party and pass it out after everyone is good and drunk.
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hoboscratch
- Posts: 432
- Joined: Thu Oct 21, 2010 7:35 am
- Location: CR
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hoboscratch
- Posts: 432
- Joined: Thu Oct 21, 2010 7:35 am
- Location: CR