Barley_Bob
Well-Known Member
I recently started brewing from RO water, and I'm having some trouble. I am using Bru'n water, but solutions are elusive. I'm brewing a weizenbock tomorrow, and my mash pH is coming up way too acidic. I don't often brew darker colored beers, and this is my first using RO, so I need some experience.
I've tried removing the 4oz of roast malt, 8oz of crystal, and 8oz of aromatic I'm using from the mash (to instead steep), and I've even added a gram of baking soda and removed my sulfate and chloride contributions (to add to the boil). All of that manages to get me a mash pH of 4.9. I don't want to use a lot of baking soda (for obvious reasons), so I'm not sure what to do. Pickling lime is apparently an option, but in my research into other posts, Martin has cautioned against it unless you have an amazing scale, which I do not (mine is digital and rounds to the nearest gram). Also, I don't have any pickling lime. The real problem appears to be the 10lbs of German Wheat malt, which is making an acidity contribution of 5.9. My other malts make a negligible contribution.
I could also cut the RO with some of my tap water, but the results are going to be extremely unpredictable. My tap is extremely hard, is run through a softener, and I certainly have not had it tested. So, this is an option, but I think it's a poor one.
I'll really appreciate any help, and I'm looking forward to hearing from someone. Thanks!
I've tried removing the 4oz of roast malt, 8oz of crystal, and 8oz of aromatic I'm using from the mash (to instead steep), and I've even added a gram of baking soda and removed my sulfate and chloride contributions (to add to the boil). All of that manages to get me a mash pH of 4.9. I don't want to use a lot of baking soda (for obvious reasons), so I'm not sure what to do. Pickling lime is apparently an option, but in my research into other posts, Martin has cautioned against it unless you have an amazing scale, which I do not (mine is digital and rounds to the nearest gram). Also, I don't have any pickling lime. The real problem appears to be the 10lbs of German Wheat malt, which is making an acidity contribution of 5.9. My other malts make a negligible contribution.
I could also cut the RO with some of my tap water, but the results are going to be extremely unpredictable. My tap is extremely hard, is run through a softener, and I certainly have not had it tested. So, this is an option, but I think it's a poor one.
I'll really appreciate any help, and I'm looking forward to hearing from someone. Thanks!