ColoradoJon
Member
Hello all -
Looking for a bit of guidance on water adjustments. I brew all grain, usually kits ordered from Austin Home Brew, in 5 gallon batches. I use well water (Colorado) that I have had tested, and adjust it using Bru'n Water spreadsheet. I do not adjust or test pH, but depend on calculations from the spreadsheet.
I am very precise in my brewing process and sanitization is not an issue.
My beers have always had a strange 'off' flavor, but some have been excellent. Since I tested my water and have been adjusting it they have really improved dramatically. But I still get a strange flavor that is very hard to describe. My wife describes it as 'flowery'.
I have spent several years working through this issue and have determined that my water is the culprit. If I use store bought water my beers rarely have the flavor. So... my water tested with the following:
Ca: 52
Mg: 6.4
Na: 7.9
K: 3.6 (potassium)
Fe: 0
HCO3: 146 (bicarbonate)
CO3: 2.2 (carbonate)
SO4: 16 (sulfate)
CL: 5.3 (chloride)
NO3: 17 (nitrate)
NO2: 0.1 (nitrite)
Alkalinity as CaCO3: 130
Estimated pH: 8.5
I can drastically change the flavor by adjusting the water but my problem is I do not know what a good 'baseline' is. I brew mainly pale or amber lagers, and have been using the same beer (a Harp clone) for adjustment tests. I am unsure which salts to modify and how they affect flavor, in relation to each other. I have adjusted my pale lager profile as follows, which has improved the flavor quite a bit:
Ca: 107
Mg: 6.4
Na: 7.9
SO4: 75
CL: 60
HCO3: 2.8
SO4/CL Ratio: 1.2
Estimated mash pH: 5.33
Residual Alkalinity: -78
Alkalinity: 2
Total hardness: 295
What I am trying to figure out is - are any of these numbers out of line? Is there something I need to pay more attention to, like RA and hardness?
Any help would be appreciated!
~CJ
Looking for a bit of guidance on water adjustments. I brew all grain, usually kits ordered from Austin Home Brew, in 5 gallon batches. I use well water (Colorado) that I have had tested, and adjust it using Bru'n Water spreadsheet. I do not adjust or test pH, but depend on calculations from the spreadsheet.
I am very precise in my brewing process and sanitization is not an issue.
My beers have always had a strange 'off' flavor, but some have been excellent. Since I tested my water and have been adjusting it they have really improved dramatically. But I still get a strange flavor that is very hard to describe. My wife describes it as 'flowery'.
I have spent several years working through this issue and have determined that my water is the culprit. If I use store bought water my beers rarely have the flavor. So... my water tested with the following:
Ca: 52
Mg: 6.4
Na: 7.9
K: 3.6 (potassium)
Fe: 0
HCO3: 146 (bicarbonate)
CO3: 2.2 (carbonate)
SO4: 16 (sulfate)
CL: 5.3 (chloride)
NO3: 17 (nitrate)
NO2: 0.1 (nitrite)
Alkalinity as CaCO3: 130
Estimated pH: 8.5
I can drastically change the flavor by adjusting the water but my problem is I do not know what a good 'baseline' is. I brew mainly pale or amber lagers, and have been using the same beer (a Harp clone) for adjustment tests. I am unsure which salts to modify and how they affect flavor, in relation to each other. I have adjusted my pale lager profile as follows, which has improved the flavor quite a bit:
Ca: 107
Mg: 6.4
Na: 7.9
SO4: 75
CL: 60
HCO3: 2.8
SO4/CL Ratio: 1.2
Estimated mash pH: 5.33
Residual Alkalinity: -78
Alkalinity: 2
Total hardness: 295
What I am trying to figure out is - are any of these numbers out of line? Is there something I need to pay more attention to, like RA and hardness?
Any help would be appreciated!
~CJ