Should these be put in at start of boil or flame out? I am confused.
This is a hazy iPad
Why are you using them? Normally I'd be using these in the strike water for an all-grain brew...
Directions just say 60 min so I was assuming it was in the boil. Should it be in the mash? That is why I am confused.
OK, I've just read both the recipe sheet and instructions, and you're right, they aren't all that helpful.
But what I want to know is where did your gypsum and calcium chloride come from? Were they with the kit? How do you know to add them, and where did you get the sense they should go in the boil? And, how much of each are you supposed to be adding?
Here are the directions and the recipe:
https://www.morebeer.com/images/file.php?file_id=11779
https://www.morebeer.com/images/file.php?file_id=28783
It was a kit
Thanks. Sorry I was a pain and confused you. Appreciate the help.
Everyone here is so quick to respond and very helpful. First place I come when I need help.
Guess I need to do more reading.
One thing I read in the brew science section is that gypsum, calcium chloride and lactic acid should be put in room temp water and stir to dissolve.
I don't understand #3. Why does it matter if the salt is added to the sparge? I've always added it to both. As I recall Brunwater will do the math either way.2, 3, and 4 are related to 1: you need to know your water and what you're trying to do. You could need to do nothing, you could need to do all the things. There are a few more basic rules, but these will get you started in the right direction.
- Find out why you're adding salts (this is the hardest part; learning water chemistry as it relates to brewing).
- Add salts and/or acid to the mash for pH purposes.
- Add salts to the boil (not the sparge water) for taste purposes.
- Add acid to sparge water only if fly sparging, where high pH (and tannin extraction) are potential issues.
Adding salts to points that aren't the mash is essentially done to hit a specific profile (either a city or a SO4:CL ratio). Since it's after the mash, it's done for flavor purposes, not mash pH. Adding the salts to the sparge water is more likely to not have it ultimately end up in the boil kettle, and because you're just doing it for end-game flavor purposes, adding to the boil kettle is more efficient.I don't understand #3. Why does it matter if the salt is added to the sparge? I've always added it to both. As I recall Brunwater will do the math either way.
I still don't follow. I salt for levels, not for ratios. 200 SO & 100 CL is not the same as 40 SO and 20 CL even though the ratios are the same. If I bring my mash water to 200/100 and then add an undecided amount of 0/0 sparge water, I will wind up with something less than the 200/100 that I wanted. If I bring my mash water to 200/100 and then add an undecided amount of 200/100 sparge water, I should wind up pretty close to 200/100 for the overall wort. I could start with something higher than 200/100 mash and dilute it to 200/100 sparge, but my gut tells me that is a little less reliable than the other way. I've not tried to verify it by experiment.Adding salts to points that aren't the mash is essentially done to hit a specific profile (either a city or a SO4:CL ratio). Since it's after the mash, it's done for flavor purposes, not mash pH. Adding the salts to the sparge water is more likely to not have it ultimately end up in the boil kettle, and because you're just doing it for end-game flavor purposes, adding to the boil kettle is more efficient.