There's a funny thing about how the brewing community (if you can call it that) approaches water. I'm still new enough that I remember very clearly trying to figure this out, and wondering why it was as hard as it is.
What I wanted was a recipe, including water, that I could reverse-engineer of sorts. In other words, have a recipe such as for my California Common where I'd start w/ RO water, and then here are the amendments given the grain bill and amounts. I'd then go back and figure out why it was a good water composition. And I'd brew good beer.
When I started--and I have a Ward's report, TDS meter, RO system, pH meter, so I didn't skimp on trying to understand it--it was almost as if people wanted to make it as hard to understand as possible.
One well-known water expert seems to revel in making obtuse water posts. Even went so far as to say perhaps people shouldn't be able to post (i.e., ask questions) in threads about water until they had a minimal base knowledge. I found that revealing, to say the least.
A local homebrewer with 20+ years of experience gave me some general guidelines, but no specific ones. It seemed clear to me that it was a "I had to learn it the hard way" approach instead of a "here's something to get you started, and why."
So I've had to learn it the hard way. It's an inefficient way to be sure. What bothered me was that if I had to build up water myself without experience doing it, how could I be sure I was doing it correctly? If the beer didn't turn out, was it my water or something else?
If I was to help people learn to do all-grain and get their water right, I'd probably post 3-4 recipes, along with how to adjust the water. Let them brew a couple, get it right, then figure out why the recipe for the water was correct. I've taught a local guy how to brew all-grain, and for starters I just gave him the water amendments so he could focus on process. I can't imagine how he would have fared if he'd just followed the "if it tastes good it'll brew good beer" advice.
This seems to be the last great frontier, and we certainly don't do much to make it easy.
What I wanted was a recipe, including water, that I could reverse-engineer of sorts. In other words, have a recipe such as for my California Common where I'd start w/ RO water, and then here are the amendments given the grain bill and amounts. I'd then go back and figure out why it was a good water composition. And I'd brew good beer.
When I started--and I have a Ward's report, TDS meter, RO system, pH meter, so I didn't skimp on trying to understand it--it was almost as if people wanted to make it as hard to understand as possible.
One well-known water expert seems to revel in making obtuse water posts. Even went so far as to say perhaps people shouldn't be able to post (i.e., ask questions) in threads about water until they had a minimal base knowledge. I found that revealing, to say the least.
A local homebrewer with 20+ years of experience gave me some general guidelines, but no specific ones. It seemed clear to me that it was a "I had to learn it the hard way" approach instead of a "here's something to get you started, and why."
So I've had to learn it the hard way. It's an inefficient way to be sure. What bothered me was that if I had to build up water myself without experience doing it, how could I be sure I was doing it correctly? If the beer didn't turn out, was it my water or something else?
If I was to help people learn to do all-grain and get their water right, I'd probably post 3-4 recipes, along with how to adjust the water. Let them brew a couple, get it right, then figure out why the recipe for the water was correct. I've taught a local guy how to brew all-grain, and for starters I just gave him the water amendments so he could focus on process. I can't imagine how he would have fared if he'd just followed the "if it tastes good it'll brew good beer" advice.
This seems to be the last great frontier, and we certainly don't do much to make it easy.
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