Strike water temperature

Calculate how hot to heat your mash water so that adding grain at room temperature lands you at the target mash temperature.

Formula

Strike_T = (0.41 × (T_target − T_grain) ÷ R) + T_target
where R = water-to-grain ratio (L water per kg grain), and 0.41 is the heat-capacity ratio between water and grain.

Inputs

NameUnitDescription
T_target°CDesired mash temperature
T_grain°CTemperature of dry grain (room ambient)
RL/kgWater-to-grain ratio (typical 3.0 L/kg)

Outputs

NameUnitDescription
T_strike°CTemperature to heat the strike water to before adding grain

Worked example

Inputs:

  • T_target = 67
  • T_grain = 18
  • R = 3

Calculation:

T_strike = (0.41 × (67 − 18) ÷ 3.0) + 67 = (0.41 × 49 ÷ 3.0) + 67 = 6.7 + 67 = 73.7

Result:

Heat water to ~74 °C; mash will land at 67 °C after grain addition

Sample values

Grain temp °CMash target °CRatio L/kgStrike temp °C
1865371.4
1866372.6
1867373.7
1868374.8
18652.572.2
1067374.8

What this assumes

The 0.41 multiplier is an empirical heat-capacity ratio that combines:

  • The specific heat of grain (~0.4 cal/g·°C) vs water (1.0 cal/g·°C)
  • The thermal mass of the mash tun walls
  • Typical heat loss during the strike-and-stir minute

If your mash tun is cold (e.g. a stainless kettle on a chilly day) you may need to preheat it with hot water and dump, or add 1-2 °C to the strike temperature.

Sources of error

  1. Mash tun preheat — a cold mash tun absorbs heat from the strike water before grain ever enters. Preheat by filling with 70 °C water for 5 minutes, then dump.
  2. Grain temperature — winter garages can have grain at 5-10 °C. Adjust grain temp upward in summer.
  3. Stirring — under-mixed mash has hot pockets and cold pockets; the thermometer reading is misleading. Stir thoroughly.

If your first mash misses target by 2 °C, you can correct in the tun: add small amounts of boiling water to raise temperature, or stir vigorously and lid-off to drop it.

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