Donner
Well-Known Member
a chloride to sulfate ratio of bitter.
why bitter and not 'very bitter' if you don't mind me asking.
a chloride to sulfate ratio of bitter.
Exactly. If you use Palmer's spreadsheet and can get the RA into your target area, then the pH of your mash should work itself out. For me, I have hard water, VERY hard water (I preboil to remove bicarbonate, but that's a separate topic). So I use Palmer's spreadsheet. If I'm doing something sort of pale like an IPA, I will dilute with about 50% distilled water. And this is on the spreadsheet too. I then add salts to achieve the correct RA and the correct chloride/sulfate ratio.
Looking at a spreadsheet I was working on last night for an IPA: the color of the beer is 9.2. Input that into the target color box and it gives me a RA range of -10 to 49. I aimed right for the middle, 19 for RA. I then input a 52% dilution rate with distilled water. This beer has a thin mash, lotsa water, so I input the 5.87 gallons of mash water, then add 4 grams of gypsum, 4 grams of calcium chloride and 2 grams of epsom salts on the spreadsheet. This gives me an RA of 19 and a chloride to sulfate ratio of bitter. You can go back and forth on the dilution rate and/or salts to nail the number where you want it.
The color of your beer affects the target RA because darker grains lower your pH. So if you make a darker beer, you can have a higher RA, if you have a lower color you need a lower RA. Salts lower pH, dark grain lowers pH, carbonate raises pH. It's about balancing these things.
Using this spreadsheet on the last 3 beers, I've nailed my mash pH each time without any stabilizer or anything and the beers have rocked. It's not *just* about the water, but it helps.
As linked on the first page of the thread, go to the bottom of this Palmer page for his spreadsheet:
http://www.howtobrew.com/section3/chapter15-3.html
why bitter and not 'very bitter' if you don't mind me asking.
So, what about for a partial mash? Is the RA adjustment only needed for the mash volume? But the Cl:SO4 ratio needs to be adjusted for the entire volume?
For example, say I only mash 4 pounds of grain in 1.5 gallons of water, but want to make a 5 gallon batch. I would add enough salts (e.g. CaCO3 and/or NaHCO3) to my (soft) 1.5 gallons of mash water to hit the necessary RA in the mash, but not worry about adding these same salts into the rest of the 3.5 gallons in the boil. Instead I would want to make sure that my CL:SO4 ratio was where I wanted it by adding the appropriate additions into the boil? Or does it matter?
I've only used this spreadsheet on 3 beers so far. And one was an APA and I used "bitter" and LOVED the balance. And I typically don't like *very* bitter beers. Sure I'll try the "very bitter" balance at some point but I'm in no hurry.
I have it dry hopping right now, I'll put it in the kegorator on Sat/Sun and give it a few days to carbonate then give some results.
Initial thoughts when I tasted it before dry hopping was that it gained some of the bitterness that I wanted. I will need to brew it again and get the efficiency I was looking for, and also add the gypsum in the mash and the boil instead of in the HLT.
Turned out to be a great beer, enough so that I didn't get a chance to bottle any of it because I drank it all :/ so unfortunately no competition results. Anyway I brewed up another IPA a week or so ago and did dilute with some distilled to knock my bicarbonates down (383 ppm HCO3, yikes)
My bicarbonates are at 386, so we're in the same family of hard water! I've been preboiling and then diluting, with great results thus far. But I don't brew really super pale beers anyway. My APA was 8.7 SRM. Came out great with preboiled water, then diluted with 52% distilled water then salts added...
Sounds good, how do you determine how much HCO3 and CA are precipitated out?
I've seen references to John Palmer over and over in this thread. WTF is John Palmer when it comes to homebrewing? He doesn't know any more about it than we do. He's a metallurgist for crissake. He just likes to promote himself and write books for money. If I were wanting info on water chemistry I'd ask a chemist. If I were wanting info on welding, I'd ask John Palmer...........
Secondly, what's everybody's understanding on making additions to the mash vs. the mash and sparge? My water is relatively soft (Denver), with a Cl/SO4 ratio biased toward the bitter side of things. I've been treating my mash water only, but I think that's still leaving me more biased toward chloride than sulfates.
So then, since I have to add hardness for anything darker than about 15 SRM, should I be adding hardness to the mash only and just adjusting sparge water for the Cl/SO4 ratio, or should I treat all the water for hardness too? It seems like the first is the way to go, unless I'm misunderstanding something, right?
Right?
So what is the actual "balanced' range? What do you like to do? Where can I find good ratios for different styles? Is there really no difference between the same ratio at different levels (within reason), is 10ppm:10ppm really equal 150ppm:150ppm?
If I can add 50 ppm of chloride to achieve a 1:1 balance, would that be identical to a profile with ~300 ppm of each?
The other issue with soft water that I can see is the low levels incresses the potential for error. If my city water report is off by 10 to 20 ppm for either value it could seriously mess up the results. For those who might have have you water tested, was the report similar to the values form the city?
I've seen references to John Palmer over and over in this thread. WTF is John Palmer when it comes to homebrewing? He doesn't know any more about it than we do. He's a metallurgist for crissake. He just likes to promote himself and write books for money. If I were wanting info on water chemistry I'd ask a chemist. If I were wanting info on welding, I'd ask John Palmer...........
Secondly, what's everybody's understanding on making additions to the mash vs. the mash and sparge? My water is relatively soft (Denver), with a Cl/SO4 ratio biased toward the bitter side of things. I've been treating my mash water only, but I think that's still leaving me more biased toward chloride than sulfates.
That doesn't really make sense. If anything you'd add alkalinity to your water to make darker brews. You need a higher RA for darker brews and alkalinity increases RA, hardness decreases RA (better for light colored brews).So then, since I have to add hardness for anything darker than about 15 SRM, should I be adding hardness to the mash only and just adjusting sparge water for the Cl/SO4 ratio, or should I treat all the water for hardness too? It seems like the first is the way to go, unless I'm misunderstanding something, right?
Secondly, what's everybody's understanding on making additions to the mash vs. the mash and sparge?
That doesn't really make sense. If anything you'd add alkalinity to your water to make darker brews. You need a higher RA for darker brews and alkalinity increases RA, hardness decreases RA (better for light colored brews).
If anything you'd add alkalinity to your water to make darker brews. You need a higher RA for darker brews and alkalinity increases RA, hardness decreases RA (better for light colored brews).
From my understanding, "permanent" hardness is hardness derived from Calcium and Magnesium, while "temporary" hardness is derived from carbonate. Gypsum and Calcium Chloride lower the pH. Carbonate has the effect of raising it.
I'm not really sure if I'm reading this right, but according to wikipedia, CaCl2 has an acidity of 8-9?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calcium_chloride
(under Properties in sidebar on right)
Acidity (pKa)
8-9 (anhydrous)
6.5-8.0 (hexahydrate)
Calcium sulfate (gypsum) has an acidity even higher:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calcium_sulfate
Acidity (pKa)
10.4 (anhydrous)
7.3 (dihydrate)
I start with RO and add whatever salts are needed. For the mash, the salts are added right with the grain at dough in. For the sparge, I use straight RO water, and then add the salts directly to the boil kettle for the amount of sparge water needed to hit my preboil level. In the end, my mash and sparge water are identical, just as the mash and sparge water has traditionally been identical in the historic brewing cities.
The reason not to add salts to your sparge water is that some of them, calcium carbonate in particular, don't dissolve well into plain water, but will at the pH levels in the kettle.
Don't think that's important to know, personally. If you get your head around the basic concepts of what's going on, that's good enough.
I'm not sure how that isn't important. If you're adding something to water that either increases or decreases its pH, shouldn't you know which one it does?