Wheat ...

You’re thinking of conversion. Gelatinization is what makes the enzymes available for conversion. I think your temp was fine for that.

I’ve had this issue with Briess white wheat. I’ve used Rahr without issue. I generally avoid Briess when I can. I’ve always used domestic wheat, so can’t give an opinion on that.

I find Briess to be a high quality maltster. I have always liked their malts.

That said I have not made many wheat beers so I can’t speak specifically to their White Wheat malt.

Thanks for that.  I was anti-Briess for awhile but somewhere in there Label Peelers was selling some of their various pilsner malts at crazy cheap prices and I bought a few sacks while keeping my fingers crossed and those beers came out nicely.  I think I would continue to use this Briess White Wheat in recipes where the wheat was 10% of the grist, etc. and make a note that higher percentages should be a different wheat.  I’m sure there would be more homework to do to find the specific issue but if I try another wheat and see better results that would be good enough for me.

Just throwing out a data point. A friend of mine is a farmer in eastern Montana. Years ago I took some of his white winter wheat, milled it into flour in a Vitamix blender, and used it in a 65% pilsner/35% unmalted wheat pilsner. The beer turned out brilliantly clear.

I recall that he said that this white winter wheat was pretty cheap on the open market because of the low protein content. The red Durham wheat grown over in North Dakota had a higher protein content and fetched a higher price on the market because of that among other reasons, as it is prized for making pasta.

I had some issues with their 2-Row years ago.  I hadn’t brewed with Briess for years until now. My local only carries Briess, so I have a couple sacks of it. Not sure what it is about their wheat. Could be variety, or where it’s grown. I almost never brew wheat beers. I’ve had good luck with Rahr and CMC, so I try to use those.

This beer is finishing up and then I’ll run it off into the keg and add a gel solution.  I assume the gel will be strictly a formality and that the beer WILL NOT be clear and I am anticipating that.  It’s true that not all beers are brilliantly clear.  I see plenty of people drinking Blue Moon which looks like dirty dishwater to me but that’s how it goes.  I’ll have some lemon wedges in the pub fridge and I’ll drink this beer out of a German ceramic stein so I can’t see it.  :D  Cheers Beerheads.

I won’t know for awhile but … I ran this beer off to the keg yesterday.  The fermenter I use is sort of translucent and as I looked at the beer in there it looked clear, to my surprise.  I wasn’t convinced so I ran it off and at the end I went to harvest the yeast and there was maybe 1/4" or so of beer on top of the yeast and indeed it looked clear.  I put the keg in the fridge and today I added a gel solution and started force-carbing it.  If it’s clear it would surprise me.  It seemed like a stubborn haze that would not go away but it’s a good reminder not to jump to conclusions … which I have in the past.  More later.  Cheers Beerheads.