|
|
|
|
|
|
Sign Up for Brew Your Own’s Free E-Newsletter
|
| What is the best way to calculate IBU contributions from continual hopping? |
| Issue |
November 2011 |
What is the best way to calculate IBU contributions from continual hopping?
Brian S Gibson
Manchester, New Hampshire
There is a basic formula that can be used to calculate the weight of
hops added to wort during boiling, which is:
Hop weight (grams) = ((liters wort) * (IBU contribution of addition) *
(0.001)) ÷ ((% utilization) * (% alpha acids of hop addition))
There are certain calculations that simply do not make sense converting
to English units, and hop calculations are one example. The IBU
(International Bitterness Unit) is expressed as milligrams iso-alpha
acids/liter beer, so the calculations using IBUs are metric by nature.
When crunching numbers with this equation it is important to convert the
utilization and alpha acid percentages to decimals; for example, 30%
utilization should be input as 0.30, not 30.
Hop utilization is the key to bitterness estimation through hop
calculations. This value numerically defines the amount of iso-alpha
acids in the finished beer compared to the amount of alpha acids added
to the wort during boiling. If you have a beer with 20 IBUs that was
made by adding only one hop addition during boiling and the hop
utilization was determined to be 25%, you can determine that 80 mg of
alpha acids/liter of wort (post boil volume) must have been added.
Hop utilization is not an easy value to know unless you analyze your
finished beer and back-calculate utilization based on the brew. Most
small craft brewers do not have the labs required for this analysis and
those who do actually measure beer bitterness use outside labs. Since
this analysis is not exactly cheap, most small craft brewers, and the
majority of homebrewers, do not really know their hop utilizations for
the various beers brewed.
Most small brewers rely on tables and equations developed by others to
estimate utilization. In general terms utilization increases as wort
gravity goes down and increases as exposure to hot wort increases. The
hop preparation also influences utilization, with pellets usually
yielding higher values than cones. And pH, kettle design, fermenter
design, yeast strain and clarification method can also affect
utilization.
In my experience, utilization varies between 2–35% for pellet hops added
to 12 °Plato during the boil. The maximum utilization of this range
occurs after about 60 minutes of boiling and the minimum is obtained
when hops are added to the whirlpool after the boil. The increase in
utilization with boil time is linear over the normal range of what most
brewers do in the brewhouse. This means that you could approximate the
results of “continuous” hopping one of two ways.
The easiest method is also the most realistic, and that is to
approach the problem as a bunch of discrete additions over the course of
the boil since you probably will be using pellets and not a liquid hop
preparation.
For the sake of discussion purposes, I am going to assume that a batch
of wort is prepared by boiling for 60 minutes, during which time 120
individual hop pellets are added to the kettle. Furthermore, let’s
assume that the brewer has decided on a form of self-abuse for the brew
and has decided to use a timer as a reminder to add 1 hop pellet every
30 seconds for the hour boil. The math is pretty simple. Step one is to
develop a regression equation based on data from others (Malowicki and
Shellhammer, for example). You can easily write a formula to provide the
expected utilization for each of the 120 additions. After this you
calculate the IBU contribution of each addition, sum the 120 additions
and now you have an educated guess about the predicted bitterness of the
finished beer.
I wish I knew more about what I do today when I took calculus during my
freshman and sophomore years of college. I don’t remember how to use
calculus, but do know its applications and there are many to be found in
a brewery. For all the math whizzes out there in BYO-land, now is your
chance to apply your integration skills to brewing. If you go all out
and solve this problem by integration you really need to use a liquid
hop extract preparation and design a system to deliver a constant flow
rate of hop extract to the kettle. And now the problem becomes fun! You
cannot simply put the extract in a burette, for example, and open the
outlet valve to a set point because the flow of extract will change as
the container is emptied (variable static head). I am imagining some
pretty cool projects coming from this discussion. |
Subscribe
This Free Trial Issue offer is only valid in the US and Canada. To subscribe to Brew Your Own outside the US and Canada, please click here.
To order a gift subscription to Brew Your Own, please click here.
|
Find Suppliers
Where to Buy BYO
|