str1p3s
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- Joined
- Jan 5, 2016
- Messages
- 221
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Trying to hit this profile for a Bell's Two Hearted clone:
Water Profile: Ca 130 | Mg 1 | Na 43 | SO4 209 | Cl 75
Using Bru'n water, the only way I can see to get the numbers to balance is to use gypsum and CaCl2 to get the calcium, sulfate, and chloride in the right range and use baking soda to get sodium in there without messing with the other numbers. The baking soda drives the pH up, so I counter it with some lactic acid. Is baking soda and lactic in the same mash frowned upon since they do opposite things?
If not this way, how would you get this profile?
Side question, is 1ppm of Mg worth the attention or can I ignore it?
Some background:
The reason I'm shooting for this profile is after reading the latest brulosophy article:
http://brulosophy.com/2019/03/25/ho...t-vs-standard-centennial-exbeeriment-results/
My IPAs have been meh and I'm trying to figure out why and wanted to use a known water profile to possibly eliminate that as the issue.
Water Profile: Ca 130 | Mg 1 | Na 43 | SO4 209 | Cl 75
Using Bru'n water, the only way I can see to get the numbers to balance is to use gypsum and CaCl2 to get the calcium, sulfate, and chloride in the right range and use baking soda to get sodium in there without messing with the other numbers. The baking soda drives the pH up, so I counter it with some lactic acid. Is baking soda and lactic in the same mash frowned upon since they do opposite things?
If not this way, how would you get this profile?
Side question, is 1ppm of Mg worth the attention or can I ignore it?
Some background:
The reason I'm shooting for this profile is after reading the latest brulosophy article:
http://brulosophy.com/2019/03/25/ho...t-vs-standard-centennial-exbeeriment-results/
My IPAs have been meh and I'm trying to figure out why and wanted to use a known water profile to possibly eliminate that as the issue.