beerboymark
New Member
Hello All, this is my first thread!
I will be brewing my first AG brew in a couple of weeks and have some queries on hitting mash pH. Im planning on a single hopped pale ale around 12 SRM/24 EBC.
Here is my current recipe
http://brewgr.com/recipe/22062/cascade-single-american-pale-ale-recipe?public=true
I have a comprehensive water quality report from my supplier however mineral concentrations are very varied. The 2015 report states min and max tested levels of the following:
Ca - 64-84
Mg - 8-10
SO4 - 52-121
Chloride - 28-71
Alkalinity - 138 (not on the report to phoned my supplier and they said this is quite a stable number)
I was planning on using salt additions to reduce residual alkalinity and balance the SO4:Cl- ratio for my designated beer style but I feel my time could be wasted given the mineral ranges.
I cannot afford a water test kit to determine mineral levels on my brew day so here was my idea to hit mash pH:
Add grain to strike water
Check pH level
Adjust pH level with lactic acid to get to 5.2-5.5 (probably by adding a little bit at a time unless there is handy calculator?)
How does that sound?
Thanks in advance!
I will be brewing my first AG brew in a couple of weeks and have some queries on hitting mash pH. Im planning on a single hopped pale ale around 12 SRM/24 EBC.
Here is my current recipe
http://brewgr.com/recipe/22062/cascade-single-american-pale-ale-recipe?public=true
I have a comprehensive water quality report from my supplier however mineral concentrations are very varied. The 2015 report states min and max tested levels of the following:
Ca - 64-84
Mg - 8-10
SO4 - 52-121
Chloride - 28-71
Alkalinity - 138 (not on the report to phoned my supplier and they said this is quite a stable number)
I was planning on using salt additions to reduce residual alkalinity and balance the SO4:Cl- ratio for my designated beer style but I feel my time could be wasted given the mineral ranges.
I cannot afford a water test kit to determine mineral levels on my brew day so here was my idea to hit mash pH:
Add grain to strike water
Check pH level
Adjust pH level with lactic acid to get to 5.2-5.5 (probably by adding a little bit at a time unless there is handy calculator?)
How does that sound?
Thanks in advance!