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Advanced Techniques

Decoction Mashing

2 min read Actualizado Mar 03, 2026

The Old Way

Decoction mashing removes a portion of the mash, boils it, and returns it to raise the main mash temperature. This labor-intensive technique predates thermometers — brewers used boiling fractions to step through temperature rests predictably.

Why Decoction

Boiling the thick mash fraction drives Maillard reactions, producing melanoidins — complex flavor compounds that contribute a rich, bready, deeply malty character impossible to achieve through infusion mashing alone. Decoction also fully gelatinizes starch, improving conversion efficiency.

Single Decoction

The simplest decoction schedule. Mash in at a lower temperature (protein rest or beta-amylase rest), pull one-third of the thickest portion, boil it for 15-20 minutes, and return it to raise the main mash to saccharification temperature.

Suitable for most German lager styles when using modern well-modified malts.

Double Decoction

Two decoction pulls, stepping from protein rest through saccharification to mash-out. More melanoidin development than single decoction. Traditional for Munich Dunkel, Bock, and Doppelbock.

Triple Decoction

The full traditional schedule: acid rest → protein rest → saccharification → mash-out, with three separate boiling decoctions. Maximum melanoidin development. Primarily historical interest — few brewers perform triple decoctions today, as modern well-modified malts do not require it.

Decoction Procedure

  1. Calculate the volume of mash to pull (typically one-third of the total)
  2. Pull the thickest portion (more grain, less liquid) — this maximizes starch exposure to boiling
  3. Bring the pulled fraction to a boil in a separate kettle
  4. Boil vigorously for 15-20 minutes, stirring to prevent scorching
  5. Return the boiling fraction to the main mash, stirring continuously
  6. Verify the new temperature matches the target rest
  7. Repeat for additional decoctions

Scoring Prevention

The biggest risk during decoction is scorching the thick mash on the bottom of the kettle. Stir constantly during heating and boiling. A heavy-bottomed kettle helps distribute heat evenly.

Modern Alternatives

Some brewers approximate decoction character by adding melanoidin malt (20-40L) at 3-5% of the grain bill. This adds Maillard reaction products without the labor of decoction. It is a reasonable shortcut but does not fully replicate the depth of a true decoction.

When to Decoct

Decoction is most impactful for malt-showcasing styles: Pilsner, Munich Dunkel, Bock, Doppelbock, Marzen, and Vienna Lager. For hop-forward styles or yeast-driven Belgian ales, the extra effort provides diminishing returns — malt nuance is overshadowed by other flavors.

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