Advanced Techniques
Decoction Mashing
The traditional technique for authentic German malt depth.
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
- Calculate the volume of mash to pull (typically one-third of the total)
- Pull the thickest portion (more grain, less liquid) — this maximizes starch exposure to boiling
- Bring the pulled fraction to a boil in a separate kettle
- Boil vigorously for 15-20 minutes, stirring to prevent scorching
- Return the boiling fraction to the main mash, stirring continuously
- Verify the new temperature matches the target rest
- 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.
More in this series
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