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StevieBrew

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I'm brewing an IPA and want to test the ABV. I started with 2 1/2 gallons and will add water. Question is do I take the initial reading of just the wort, or after I add the water and its 5 gallons? Thanks 🍻
 
You take a gravity reading at your final volume. In this case, you'd measure at 5 gallons.
 
The gravity at the final volume is what matters. You can actually get a more accurate reading if you measure before topping off and then convert it mathematically, but you'll have to waste a bit of wort to do so (proportionally more sugars wasted since it's more concentrated at the time).

Assuming you're doing an extract kit beer, honestly you can just not bother taking the original gravity reading since as long as you do everything correctly it'll be correct, and more often than not the errors new brewers have with their gravity readings are with the way the reading is taken, and not with the actual gravity. However, taking an OG reading is common practice and it's certainly not harmful to get in the habit of doing it.

Although just to be clear, you can't tell ABV with just that first reading, not until it's fermented and you know where the final gravity ended up.
 
Sounds like you are doing a partial boil extract or partial mash. ABV is a product of original gravity and the final gravity. When the fermentation is complete you can use a calculator such as this one to find ABV.
http://www.brewersfriend.com/abv-calculator/

OG is measured after the wort is topped off in the fermentor to the recipe volume. It is a good idea to have your fermentor marked in one gallon increments. A thorough mix of the boiled wort and the top off water is often difficult leading to errors in measuring the specific gravity. A calculator using the fermentable ingredients can give you an estimated original gravity.
http://www.brewersfriend.com/extract-ogfg/
 
Perfect, thanks for all the help. It's my first attempt at making my own recipe. That's why I wanted to make sure and measure correctly.
 

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