unclepumble said:
Actually AM most large Commercials now use all RO water & then adjust the water chemistry to suit the profile required, that's how they brew foreign beers here, It also ensures they have no trouble with certain contaminent's in the water table they are drawing from.
This is one case where you do not want to blindly follow commercial practice
. If you have a lab that can accurately measure your additions and dose the water in the right order then go for it, otherwise you are more than likely to end up doing more harm than good.
unclepumble said:
For home use the best thing to do is to read up about water treatment, there is plenty of info on the web and in books
And it's either over complex, wrong and misleading :twisted:
unclepumble said:
You need to know the following (which you can get from your water suppliers drinking water quality report):
you need to know the levels of
Calcium
Magnesium
Sodium
Sulphate
Chloride
As MG/l or PPM
you will also need to find out the alkalinity as CaCO3, not usually on your water quality report a quick phone call to their lab via customer services will usually get you that info.
Which is often out of date and from a single measurement in the last 12 months.
You can then you the water calculator in the calculators section of the forum, to get the additions required to get your water right.
unclepumble said:
you will need CRS, epsom salts, gypsum, table salt and chalk to change your current water profile to brew other styles
The one thing you don't need is chalk . . . as your water is filtered through and stored in chalk beds. This is the big problem with your water, the chalk has dissolved and is sitting there as calcium and carbonate/bicarbonate ions. . . . the calcium is good . . . the carbonate is very bad (If brewing a pale ale/lager), and needs to be removed . . . the easiest way is to use an acid addition (Brupaks CRS is the easiest to get hold of and most flavour neutral ) . . . but to do this you need to
measure the alkalinity level in the water you are going to use for brewing. Salifert do a aquarium test kit that allows you to do this fairly accurately (other test kits are available but the accuracy is somewhat questionable).
The other thing I would question is the requirement of table salt, I'm still trying to understand why there is the need to blindly throw sodium ions into the water? I know that traditionally London waters are high in sodium chloride, but there is no brewing reason why it needs to be added. Calcium sulphate and calcium chloride are both used to add calcium ions, which are essential in many brewing reactions, magnesium sulphate provides magnesium ions which are required by used as a trace nutrients. Often sufficient magnesium is provided by the malts so does not need to be supplemented. the choice between calcium sulphate and calcium chloride is made depending on which way the brewer wants to bias the flavours of the beer. For a hoppy beer you need to increase sulphate level, for a malty beer you need to increase the chloride level, the levels of fluoride and sulphate given in the water analysis report should be sufficient to guide you as to what your resulting beers taste like.
The brewing purposes water treatment is very simple, however many authors and web sources over complicate matters, and unless you actually have sound brewing techniques then water treatments are not going to make any difference to the finished beer. There are much more important factors that need to be mastered before doing anything more complicated than adding half a Camden tablet to the water before brewing. (At least as far as hard/hi alkalinity waters are concerned)