seventhmagus
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- Joined
- May 4, 2015
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Hey everyone. I was planning on making a big barleywine, and I live in an area where the water is fairly alkaline (Tucson).
I want to make the beer out of 100% 2-row barley and boil for at least 5 hours -- I want to experience Maillard products like I never have before.
The sticky says "you will have to add some sort of acid to your brew" and I was wondering if any of you guys had had luck with using a decoction mash to lower your pH. I would rather do a decoction if it means avoiding adding lactic/phosphoric acid to my brew, but if it isn't effective then I wouldn't go down that path.
The other thought I had was adding pitted (de-pitted?) plums to the mash to lower pH, but I'd rather do that on a subsequent brew.
Thanks for all your thoughts.
p.s. it is BIAB in a 5-gal kettle, I'm thinking single batch sparge in another pot, english style with WLP007 english ale yeast, and hop schedule TBD, but I have a pound of Phoenix, EKG, Willamette, Fuggles, Bullion, and Bravo each.
I want to make the beer out of 100% 2-row barley and boil for at least 5 hours -- I want to experience Maillard products like I never have before.
The sticky says "you will have to add some sort of acid to your brew" and I was wondering if any of you guys had had luck with using a decoction mash to lower your pH. I would rather do a decoction if it means avoiding adding lactic/phosphoric acid to my brew, but if it isn't effective then I wouldn't go down that path.
The other thought I had was adding pitted (de-pitted?) plums to the mash to lower pH, but I'd rather do that on a subsequent brew.
Thanks for all your thoughts.
p.s. it is BIAB in a 5-gal kettle, I'm thinking single batch sparge in another pot, english style with WLP007 english ale yeast, and hop schedule TBD, but I have a pound of Phoenix, EKG, Willamette, Fuggles, Bullion, and Bravo each.