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I'm still learning the water side of brewing... I'm doing a pale ale with Anglian water, the hardest water I've come across - from the water report the hardness is something like 300ppm as carbonate. Very high - the limescale left on everything the water touches confirms this to be the case.
I've already got bottled water to dilute (3 bottled :1 tap) to reduce the residual alkalinity for the mash as my usual process (plus some Citric acid), however I was wondering if I could boil the mash liquor first and then allow to cool overnight and then resume in the morning to get it back to strike temperature.
Is this feasible and how much of the carbonate will this remove approximately (I assume it won't be all of it, more like 75%)? I can add Gypsum back in to bring up the calcium if necessary. Do I need to decant it off the sediment to remove the chalk or can I just leave it for the mash if it's not in solution?
The figures for the local tap water I looked up online are:
Calcium177, Sulphate22, Chloride58, Sodium25, Magnesium2.4, Hardness as carbonate 300, pH7.65
I've already got bottled water to dilute (3 bottled :1 tap) to reduce the residual alkalinity for the mash as my usual process (plus some Citric acid), however I was wondering if I could boil the mash liquor first and then allow to cool overnight and then resume in the morning to get it back to strike temperature.
Is this feasible and how much of the carbonate will this remove approximately (I assume it won't be all of it, more like 75%)? I can add Gypsum back in to bring up the calcium if necessary. Do I need to decant it off the sediment to remove the chalk or can I just leave it for the mash if it's not in solution?
The figures for the local tap water I looked up online are:
Calcium177, Sulphate22, Chloride58, Sodium25, Magnesium2.4, Hardness as carbonate 300, pH7.65
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