strange-steve
Quantum Brewer
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Steve, the table printed on the first page, whereabouts would you put wheat beer.
Is it balanced ratio?
Personally I would put it in the malty category.
Steve, the table printed on the first page, whereabouts would you put wheat beer.
Is it balanced ratio?
According to Brun Water the taste threshold for citric acid is around 150mg/L, but that is very subjective. And in something like an IPA or APA it's possibly a welcome flavour.That's a really interesting point about citric that I had considered before. Naturally it would give a citrus taste. And I hadn't thought about it having a different threshold than CRS or lactic.
I've never been able to find a max recommended dosage rate (per g/L) for it either.
The most I've had to dose at is 0.22g/L for a really pale beer to get the ph down to mash @ 5.4.
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I have lactic acid in powder form not liquid,what's the quantities in grams?
Evening ....
Going to use east London tap water for a light beer/lager type thingy- anyway I've tested it and its coming out at 248ppm CaCo3. I want to remove 230ppm per liter. I have 81% phosphoric acid to use.
Am I right that each 0.14ml of the acid removes 100ppm of CaCo3 per liter of water ?
If my calcs are right then I need 9.66ml of phosphoric acid for 30liters of hard as nails Thames water....?
Thanks folks
There's a nice neat looking little RO system on eBay for �ã46, looks very similar to the one I use. I installed it under my kitchen sink and I love it.
The question really is how do you want your beer? If you prefer a full bodied, malty finish then balance towards chloride. If you prefer a lighter, crisp finish then go more sulphate. Personally for a bitter, I go for a balanced profile. For me a bitter is all about drinkability, so not too heavy and not too dry.I wonder if someone could tell me the profile they would go for with a Yorkshire Bitter
Malty?
Balanced?
Bitter?
Thanks
The question really is how do you want your beer? If you prefer a full bodied, malty finish then balance towards chloride. If you prefer a lighter, crisp finish then go more sulphate. Personally for a bitter, I go for a balanced profile. For me a bitter is all about drinkability, so not too heavy and not too dry.
If you use RO water then it's very simple. For example, if I was brewing a very bitter DIPA then I want to add around 100 ppm of calcium with a sulphate:chloride ratio of about 4:1. As you can see from the tables above, an addition of 0.4g/L of gypsum and 0.1g/L of calcium chloride will give me:
calcium - 119ppm
sulphate - 223ppm
chloride - 48ppm
Ratio of 4.6
Which is close enough.
Gypsum:
Addition - Increase in sulphate - Increase in calcium
0.1 g/L - 56 ppm - 23 ppm
0.2 g/L - 112 ppm - 46 ppm
0.3 g/L - 167 ppm - 69 ppm
0.4 g/L - 223 ppm - 92 ppm
0.5 g/L - 279 ppm - 115 ppm
0.6 g/L - 335 ppm - 138 ppm
Calcium Chloride:
Addition - Increase in chloride - Increase in calcium
0.1g/L - 48 ppm - 27 ppm
0.15g/L - 72 ppm - 41 ppm
0.2g/L - 97 ppm - 54 ppm
0.25g/L - 121 ppm - 68 ppm
0.3g/L - 145 ppm - 81 ppm
@strange -steve@clarkeuk
Sorry mate, I don't understand your question. Presumably you're talking about this example from the OP:
In this example we are using RO water, so you can assume for simplicity that it has 0ppm of calcium, chloride and sulphate. Using the table below, you can see that adding 0.4g/L of gypsum will add 92ppm of calcium and 223ppm of sulphate, and an addition of 0.1g/L of calcium chloride will add 27ppm calcium and 48ppm chloride. So the total calcium is now 117ppm.
@strange -steve
Sorry for the poorly put question rushed it off this morning trying to get my head round it
I think I get it now when adding gypsum or calcium chloride , each one has a certain percentage of calcium and then sulphate or chloride .does that like iv got it now
Cheers clarke
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