AJ
I appreciate all the help you gave me for the lighter brew I made last weekend. I have some questions for my next beer. I am doing the AG Pliny the Elder clone kit from morebeer.com. Looking at this, for 5 gallons I am assuming a grain bill of approx. 85% 2 row, 5% Crystal malt, 5% Carapils, and 5% sugar (in the kettle). I confirmed with morebeer.com that there are hops included designed to be used in the mash.
My base water profile is this: Ca 56; Mg 26; Na 23; Cl 10; SO4 3 with a RA of 192
I plan to make a 2:1 mix of distilled water to tap water as it makes it much easier to bring my alkalinity to a range that I can modify with brewing salts.
With that mix, my new profile is: Ca 18; Mg 9; Na 8; Cl 3; SO4 1 with a RA of 63
I used the EZ spreadsheet because I am still trying to get a handle on your Nearly Universal sheet. I did however, as you recommended before, overlook the recommendations made on the SRM suitability for RA, and the recommendation made based on chloride to sulfate ratio.
That being said, I came up with three possible salt addition profiles, one using gypsum, the other using CaCl. (Mash water is assumed at 5 gal. Sparge water is 6 gal)
One
An addition of 3g of gypsum to my mash water and 3.4g to my sparge water will yield Ca 54; Mg 9; Na 8; Cl 3; SO4 89 with a RA of 38
You seemed to show a preference to CaCl when we were discussing my lighter, lowly hopped beer, primarily because of the increase in sulfate. While a higher sulfate may not pose as big a problem with something as highly hopped as a Pliny clone, I ran the numbers trying to bring the Calcium up by CaCl instead.
Two
An addition of 2.5g of CaCl to my mash water and 3 g to my sparge water will yield Ca 54; Mg 9; Na 8; Cl 67; SO4 1 with a RA of 38
The Cl seems a bit high to me. "Flavor and fullness" per Palmer's book are not clearly defined, so I decided to try a mix of gypsum and CaCl.
Three
I tried 2g of gypsum and 1g of CaCl in my mash, plus 2 g gypsum and 1 g of CaCl in my sparge water. That yields:
Ca 53; Mg 9; Na 8; Cl 26; SO4 55 with a RA of 36
To me, that seems to keep both the sulfates and chloride in check a little better while still bumping up calcium and lowering RA. So a couple of questions:
1. Option 3 or something close seems to be the best route to me. Agree?
2. As for "something close", I am thinking if I would want to do anything here, it would be to boost the hardness a bit (Ca, SO4 or possibly Mg and SO4 in the form of a small amount, 1g in the mash, of epsom salt)
3. With me bringing the RA down so much, do I need to do anything else to adjust mash pH? I admit I am still a little fuzzy as to the exact correlation correlation between RA of your brewing water and its effect on mash pH. Using Palmer's "rule of thumb" if adding 20% crystal to your grain bill can yield a pH drop of .5, the effects of 5% crystal in my grain bill are likely to be negligible.
4. This is a Pliny clone and calls for adding hops to the mash (about 1 ounce I believe, still waiting on the kit to arrive). Will the acids from the hops have any effect on mash pH. If so, do I need to account for that at all?
I appreciate all the help you gave me for the lighter brew I made last weekend. I have some questions for my next beer. I am doing the AG Pliny the Elder clone kit from morebeer.com. Looking at this, for 5 gallons I am assuming a grain bill of approx. 85% 2 row, 5% Crystal malt, 5% Carapils, and 5% sugar (in the kettle). I confirmed with morebeer.com that there are hops included designed to be used in the mash.
My base water profile is this: Ca 56; Mg 26; Na 23; Cl 10; SO4 3 with a RA of 192
I plan to make a 2:1 mix of distilled water to tap water as it makes it much easier to bring my alkalinity to a range that I can modify with brewing salts.
With that mix, my new profile is: Ca 18; Mg 9; Na 8; Cl 3; SO4 1 with a RA of 63
I used the EZ spreadsheet because I am still trying to get a handle on your Nearly Universal sheet. I did however, as you recommended before, overlook the recommendations made on the SRM suitability for RA, and the recommendation made based on chloride to sulfate ratio.
That being said, I came up with three possible salt addition profiles, one using gypsum, the other using CaCl. (Mash water is assumed at 5 gal. Sparge water is 6 gal)
One
An addition of 3g of gypsum to my mash water and 3.4g to my sparge water will yield Ca 54; Mg 9; Na 8; Cl 3; SO4 89 with a RA of 38
You seemed to show a preference to CaCl when we were discussing my lighter, lowly hopped beer, primarily because of the increase in sulfate. While a higher sulfate may not pose as big a problem with something as highly hopped as a Pliny clone, I ran the numbers trying to bring the Calcium up by CaCl instead.
Two
An addition of 2.5g of CaCl to my mash water and 3 g to my sparge water will yield Ca 54; Mg 9; Na 8; Cl 67; SO4 1 with a RA of 38
The Cl seems a bit high to me. "Flavor and fullness" per Palmer's book are not clearly defined, so I decided to try a mix of gypsum and CaCl.
Three
I tried 2g of gypsum and 1g of CaCl in my mash, plus 2 g gypsum and 1 g of CaCl in my sparge water. That yields:
Ca 53; Mg 9; Na 8; Cl 26; SO4 55 with a RA of 36
To me, that seems to keep both the sulfates and chloride in check a little better while still bumping up calcium and lowering RA. So a couple of questions:
1. Option 3 or something close seems to be the best route to me. Agree?
2. As for "something close", I am thinking if I would want to do anything here, it would be to boost the hardness a bit (Ca, SO4 or possibly Mg and SO4 in the form of a small amount, 1g in the mash, of epsom salt)
3. With me bringing the RA down so much, do I need to do anything else to adjust mash pH? I admit I am still a little fuzzy as to the exact correlation correlation between RA of your brewing water and its effect on mash pH. Using Palmer's "rule of thumb" if adding 20% crystal to your grain bill can yield a pH drop of .5, the effects of 5% crystal in my grain bill are likely to be negligible.
4. This is a Pliny clone and calls for adding hops to the mash (about 1 ounce I believe, still waiting on the kit to arrive). Will the acids from the hops have any effect on mash pH. If so, do I need to account for that at all?