I didn't see an active water thread that I could piggyback on without hijacking it. So here's another one.
I've been brewing pretty good beer by diluting my local tapwater with RO water, and adding Sauermalz to the grist. I'm trying to get away from using any RO water (it's a personal challenge; it doesn't have to make sense.)
I've started using lactic acid to acidify the mash, but it takes a *lot* of lactic acid to neutralize all the bicarbonate . I may switch to phosphoric acid; I have a quart in the "buy it later" section of my Amazon shopping cart.
Here's what my water looks like according to the annual city water report, in ppm. The anions and cations don't balance so the numbers are suspicious, but the alkalinity seems to be about right:
Ca++ 72, Mg++ 25, Na+ 10, Cl- 5, SO4-- 46, HCO3- 317, pH 7.5
I've read somewhere that the taste threshold for lactate is about 300 to 400 ppm. I brew in 4 gallon batches, so in round numbers that's about 15.2 liters plus another 3.8 liters lost to grain absorption. If I add 7 ml of 88% lactic acid to the mash, that's about 324 ppm, right?
7ml * .88 / 19000ml = 3.242e-4
7 ml of acid is enough to drop the pH to about 5.4 for a typical grain bill and a 4 gallon mash. 6 ml would get me somewhere around pH 5.5. If I sparge with another 2.5 gallons of water, do I really need to acidify it too if I use warm water instead of hot? (say, 100°F)
To acidify the entire 6.5 gallons with lactic acid, according to the brewersfriend mash chemistry calculator, takes 9.5ml. That yields about 440 ppm of lactate, which is higher than I want to go.
I think where I will end up eventually is using Sauergut to acidify the mash, and phosphoric acid to acidify the hot sparge water. I'm going to try lactic acid and tartaric or citric acid in my next brew session.
I've been brewing pretty good beer by diluting my local tapwater with RO water, and adding Sauermalz to the grist. I'm trying to get away from using any RO water (it's a personal challenge; it doesn't have to make sense.)
I've started using lactic acid to acidify the mash, but it takes a *lot* of lactic acid to neutralize all the bicarbonate . I may switch to phosphoric acid; I have a quart in the "buy it later" section of my Amazon shopping cart.
Here's what my water looks like according to the annual city water report, in ppm. The anions and cations don't balance so the numbers are suspicious, but the alkalinity seems to be about right:
Ca++ 72, Mg++ 25, Na+ 10, Cl- 5, SO4-- 46, HCO3- 317, pH 7.5
I've read somewhere that the taste threshold for lactate is about 300 to 400 ppm. I brew in 4 gallon batches, so in round numbers that's about 15.2 liters plus another 3.8 liters lost to grain absorption. If I add 7 ml of 88% lactic acid to the mash, that's about 324 ppm, right?
7ml * .88 / 19000ml = 3.242e-4
7 ml of acid is enough to drop the pH to about 5.4 for a typical grain bill and a 4 gallon mash. 6 ml would get me somewhere around pH 5.5. If I sparge with another 2.5 gallons of water, do I really need to acidify it too if I use warm water instead of hot? (say, 100°F)
To acidify the entire 6.5 gallons with lactic acid, according to the brewersfriend mash chemistry calculator, takes 9.5ml. That yields about 440 ppm of lactate, which is higher than I want to go.
I think where I will end up eventually is using Sauergut to acidify the mash, and phosphoric acid to acidify the hot sparge water. I'm going to try lactic acid and tartaric or citric acid in my next brew session.