Malt Milling
Types of Malt Milling
Dry Milling
In breweries, dry milling is commonly performed by roller mills or hammer mills. If the wort separation involves using a mash tun or lauter tun, roller mills are employed. Hammer mills are largely used for the later generation of mash filters and continuous brewing systems.
Roller Mills
Roller mills are particularly suited for milling malt when the primary objective is to leave the malt husk intact. An intact husk helps wort separation and may reduce extraction of tannins and other undesirable components.
Two-Row Mills - Two-roll mills (see Figure 8.1) are single-pass mills commonly used by craft breweries and/or for well-modified malts.
Multi-Row Mills - Multi-roll mills provide greater control of the rate of feed of the unground malt, the spacing between rolls, and the rate of speed, either uniform or differential, at which the rolls are driven.
Hammer Mills
A hammer mill (see Figure 8.2) consists of a rotor made of two or more plates with pins to carry the hammers. Hammers are simply flat metal bars with a hole at one or both ends. They may have some type of edge preparation such as hard facing or carbide coating to provide better wear resistance.
Malt Conditioning
A refinement to dry milling employed by numerous breweries is conditioning of malt with steam or warm water. This practice minimizes the risk of fracturing the malt husks, thus the husks become tougher and more flexible due to absorbed moisture, while the endosperm remains dry and friable.
Sampling
Dry milling and conditioned dry milling operations have the advantage that the crushed malt may be sampled by the brewer and assessed visually for uncrushed kernels, excessive tearing of the husks, and excessive flour.
Wet Milling
After milling, the milled malt is transferred to a temporary storage hopper, commonly called the grist case, that feeds the mash tun.
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