Mpavlik22
Well-Known Member
What's everyones thoughts on 5.2 Stabilizer? Worth it? Any bad luck with it?
I personally think it's useless. 5.2 is a weak buffer. The buffers already present in your water are stronger.
Basically, 5.2 works great until you actually buy pH strips or a meter.
The ph 5.2 continued to work great even after I bought a ph meter and some test strips. The meter and strips seemed to have no affect at all on the mash ph. Personally, I think it's a useful product.
You can't have both because the pH meter will stop the 5.2 from working properly. This is said with tongue firmly in cheek based on dozens of reports that 5.2 is the greatest thing since sliced bread from people who don't measure pH at all or use strips whereas those who use pH meters find that this product does not bring mash pH to 5.2. It really couldn't be expected to unless inordinate amounts of it are used as it has little buffering capacity. A buffer should never be designed for a pH more than 1 unit removed from the closest pK of the acid involved (phosphoric here - nearest pK 7.2 i.e. 2 pH units away). Beyond this it seems to buffer at 5.99 (in distilled water) i.e. the powder is a buffer designed for that pH rather than 5.2. Analysis of the sodium concentration confirms this. This has lead me to wonder whether they are relying on the malt to provide extra monobasic phosphate thus establishing a buffer closer to 5.2 but this is really a desperate attempt on my part to give them some credit for knowing what they are doing (in the chemistry sense - the stuff is sold in every LHBS and mail order catalogue so they do seem to know what they are doing in the marketing sense).
So the serious answer to your question is that 5.2 cannot be relied on to establish proper mash pH. A pH meter will show you that. Or you can take our word for it and save the money on the 5.2. The pH meter is one of the best investments you can make in brewing. Learn how to use it and it will help you to establish proper mash, kettle, and fermenter pH.
I've also tested the 5.2 with a pH meter and yeah, it's pretty much worthless.
5.2 will not buffer RO water to even a pH of 5.5. It hovers around 6.
5.2 has worked wonderfully for me. One of the things I hate about this forum is the attitude that if something doesn't work for you, it can't possibly work for anyone...
Or if it works for you, it will work for everyone else.
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If you use the recommend amount (1Tablespoon per 5 gallons) will it impart any noticeable flavors?
Basically, there are people who will tell you that it sucks and does nothing. They use pH meters and will 'prove' it for you.
Others say it works for them, and don't measure anything.
Truth be told. Its somewhere in between. If someone wants to tell me that salt doesn't act as a pH buffer, lets have that debate. If someone says it is perfect, I would disagree. I'd say buy it and see how it works for you.