I am driving myself crazy over figuring out what happened/what I need to do to get a lower mash pH when mashing, especially lighter beers. I know the obvious answer is add acid or remove alkalinity.
Here is the recipe I made
3 lbs Briess 2-Row (1.8L)
3 lbs Dingeman's Pale ale (3.9L)
10 oz Toasted Flaked Rye (3.9L?)
7 oz Caramel 40 (40L)
This was placed in 3.5 gallons of distilled/RO water (kroger brand) and they claim there's no detectable level of anything in it but does have a pH of 6.1.
When I put this into any brewing water software, with any water profile, (only tried brewers friend and bru'n water), even with 88% lactic additions I cannot get my mash pH less than 5.65 (brewer's friend) or 5.70 (bru'n water).
What am I missing or doing wrong? Using this software can't be this hard right?
Here is the link to the water report.
https://www.kroger.com/content/v2/binary/document/info/terms/water-quality_report-1603746386542.pdf
Here is the recipe I made
3 lbs Briess 2-Row (1.8L)
3 lbs Dingeman's Pale ale (3.9L)
10 oz Toasted Flaked Rye (3.9L?)
7 oz Caramel 40 (40L)
This was placed in 3.5 gallons of distilled/RO water (kroger brand) and they claim there's no detectable level of anything in it but does have a pH of 6.1.
When I put this into any brewing water software, with any water profile, (only tried brewers friend and bru'n water), even with 88% lactic additions I cannot get my mash pH less than 5.65 (brewer's friend) or 5.70 (bru'n water).
What am I missing or doing wrong? Using this software can't be this hard right?
Here is the link to the water report.
https://www.kroger.com/content/v2/binary/document/info/terms/water-quality_report-1603746386542.pdf