Yes, this would explain my mixed results.but be aware that this will be an historical average and it does vary a bit day to day - the recent dry weather will mean they're using more carbonate-rich groundwater for instance) :
How much water does an RO kit 'waste' for every litre produced and can you capture that waste water for use elsewhere like washing and watering the garden?FYI, just checked this RO filter with a calibrated Salifert kit. After nearly 5 years and over 1200l and 30 brews it’s still outputting water at ~2.5ppm CaCO3. My tap water is 131ppm CaCO3.
I had one of those, very good but same result for AMS as original HBF water calc though their DWB addition rather than gypsum/epsom saltI'm just about to order a Murphy's Expert Lab Water Analysis report through BrewUK. Anyone had one of these done before?
I haven’t measured it myself, but I read it could be 3-4 litres waste water per 1 litre of RO. If I filter 30 litres for a brew day this wastes up to 120 litres, about a bath full. One brew day a month isn’t wasting a huge amount, but I agree it is something worth looking at to reuse.How much water does an RO kit 'waste' for every litre produced and can you capture that waste water for use elsewhere like washing and watering the garden?
Thanks, that's good to know.I haven’t measured it myself, but I read it could be 3-4 litres waste water per 1 litre of RO. If I filter 30 litres for a brew day this wastes up to 120 litres, about a bath full. One brew day a month isn’t wasting a huge amount, but I agree it is something worth looking at to reuse.
You could possibly water plants with it. The waste water is going to have more impurities in it than tap water though, give it a try perhaps, but keep an eye on if your plants care for it. You could certainly use it for washing and cleaning though.
Did you progress any further with your burtonisation experiments? The reason I ask is that I'm considering trying the Murphys profile for bitters in my next Yorkshire bitter and it calls for 400ppm sulphate. (Ca:170, Mg:15, Cl:200, SO4: 400). This is the sort of water profile that would send our American friends running for the hills but I'm minded to trust Murphys on matters of UK beers.I spent a bit of time messing with gypsum quantities. I'd say you are right; unlike many water additions lots of gypsum (300ppm+ sulphate) really does effect the flavour. Changing malt flavours to something I could recognise as Marsden's Pedigree in my Pedigree clone attempts. But after a short while (3-4 weeks I found) it would start displaying it's "documented" qualities like "dryness" - I described it as like sticking your tongue on a well used blackboard. Quite inappropriate for a relatively low ABV beer (<4.5%), perhaps needs stronger beers (I'll use 300ppm+ in my "Burton Ales" but do not recognise anything obvious from the gypsum).
The sulphurous notes ("snatch") passed me by, but I understand there are a combination of circumstances to bring this out (can't say I've ever noticed it in "real" Pedigree either).
FWIW I recently used Murphy's bitter profile for both my 'Yorkshire' and 'London bitters (in fact I had to take the Calcium a bit higher, see below).Did you progress any further with your burtonisation experiments? The reason I ask is that I'm considering trying the Murphys profile for bitters in my next Yorkshire bitter and it calls for 400ppm sulphate. (Ca:170, Mg:15, Cl:200, SO4: 400). This is the sort of water profile that would send our American friends running for the hills but I'm minded to trust Murphys on matters of UK beers.
Blimey, you've had to dig deep in the "archives" to pull this one out!Did you progress any further with your burtonisation experiments? The reason I ask is that I'm considering trying the Murphys profile for bitters in my next Yorkshire bitter and it calls for 400ppm sulphate. (Ca:170, Mg:15, Cl:200, SO4: 400). This is the sort of water profile that would send our American friends running for the hills but I'm minded to trust Murphys on matters of UK beers.
FWIW I recently used Murphy's bitter profile for both my 'Yorkshire' and 'London bitters (in fact I had to take the Calcium a bit higher, see below).
The beers tasted good to me and went down well with the lads. For ref, I hate the slightest hint of 'sulphur' (e.g. Marston's Pedigree).
I used 50% RO with my very hard tapwater which is probably not too different from yours; then added salts as follows:
View attachment 55667
For reference my tap water is Ca 145, Mg 0, Na 30, Bicarb 333, Sulphate 42, Chloride 55, Nitrate 31.
Thanks for the update. I'd wondered how far you'd gone with this and was surprised that you had difficulty dissolving it at the time as I can get it to dissolve with a stick blender at about 1/4 teaspoon in 500ml of cold water.Blimey, you've had to dig deep in the "archives" to pull this one out!
Not really. The dry sensation established itself too quickly for me to get through the entire batch (the sensation appeared after 3-4 weeks, but the beer was only brewed a week earlier). The initial enhancements were very welcome, but I felt the dry sensation would need a much heavier beer to go with.
Pale beers I do now are generally down to 2-300ppm sulphate.
Ironically I now commonly brew those heavy beers (1.055-65 rather than 1.040-45), the ones I thought would be more suitable, but not "Burton" examples just yet. I'm planning some historical "Burton Ales" (hopped Ales, not IPAs, those beers came later). I may revisit high gypsum content water then, but that's way down the line.
I tend to use Graham Wheelers concoctions for water (his "Burton" profile only goes for 367ppm sulphate BTW - I've not tried that recently). I used to have a battle dissolving that much gypsum, but since I've changed to a newer more finely divided sample dissolving it is a whole lot easier. I think my original sample came out of a bag of builder's plaster!
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