New Water or Not?

The Homebrew Forum

Help Support The Homebrew Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Don't really need that long - 24 hours is enough to allow the chlorine added by the water companies to dissipate...
 
Could it not be to let calcium carbinate fall out of suspension? I boil my water the night before and let it sit, but no idea if the happens without boiling first.
 
I used to draw the water the night before to allow the chlorine to dissipate. Then, when I moved to extract and had to boil water, I figured that would remove the chlorine etc. so I stopped bothering to do that.

I played around with bottled water on a few brews but didn't notice any difference in the quality of the beer, so knocked that on the head too.

Now I have the GF and boiler, I plan to fill both the day before which solves the Chlorine issue. Chloramine doesn't seem to be listed on water quality statements, so is it a default in all tap water, or is it a "possible"?
 
Our water is from the village pump but it is exceptionally hard with 330ppm CaCO3. No chlorine but we treat with over 1ml/litre of AMS. I dream about living in a soft water area.
 
I have never left water to rest before brewing. I started using campden tablets a couple of years ago and a few brews afterwards, I started noticing a twang, just like Gerrjo. After several compromised brews, I realised that it only needed 1/4 tablet in each of mash and sparge water, rather than the half a tablet I had been adding to each. Since then I stopped using it altogher and haven't had a bad brew since. Maybe my water is just naturally low in chlorine & chloramines.
 
It's important to let your water stand for a few days after drawing it from the tap before using it to brew

Is this correct and why?
No it's not correct. I mean you could do that as a way of removing chlorine, but as others have mentioned there are much quicker and effective methods.
I've only tried the Campden tablet once and notice a noticeable twang on that particular brew so never tried again.
If you dose at the proper rate (about half a tablet per 35L of water) then I seriously doubt the twang is from the Campden tablet.
Could it not be to let calcium carbinate fall out of suspension? I boil my water the night before and let it sit, but no idea if the happens without boiling first.
I wouldn't think so, you need to boil it first to drive off CO2 and then syphon off the top of the settled calcium carbonate otherwise it will dissolve back into solution.
 
Back
Top