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mash pH for belgian quad?? brewing today!

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HausBrauerei_Harvey

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I'm brewing a belgian quad today, only pilsner malt, pale ale malt and D-180, which will be added AFTER krausen has dropped.

Thus my mash is only pilsner and pale ale malt, so should I target a mash pH of 5.3-5.4? I doubt I should go into the 5.5 range suggested for darker beers, as the color will come from the sugar much later.

Thanks guys!
 
Yes, the ballpark of 5.3 to 5.4 pH is where you want to be. You will likely need some level of acidification, which will be dependent upon a combination your grist bill and strike water chemistry/volume.
 
Yes, the ballpark of 5.3 to 5.4 pH is where you want to be. You will likely need some level of acidification, which will be dependent upon a combination your grist bill and strike water chemistry/volume.

ok thanks, i figured this and am familiar with adjustments, but it just occurred to me when looking at brewing water that I didn't know if i should target a the ph range for a light or dark beer for this one.

Thanks again!
 
I brewed CSI's version of the Westy 12 with the same recipe. I used only Bel Pilsner and Pale Malt, the color all came from a boil down reduction of first runnings and D-180 (added post boil). I struggled with the same question as you are right now, and I landed in the 5.5 pH of the darker beer range as my goal because ultimately I want the beer to have a richer mouthfeel in the end, so despite the fact that I was mashing only base grains I wasn't going for a dry drinkable IPA.

I did minimal mash additions, just enough to get the mash to 90 ppm Cl and 70 ppm So4, then added enough acid malt to to hit a pH of about 5.5 (actually just under). For me this only took 4 oz on a 15# grain bill.

My quad is only 7 months old right now, but I just had a bottle last week and the mouthfeel and flavor is spot on to what I wanted. Still a little heavy on the alcohol, but its shaping up to be an outstanding example of the style. This is only one person's experience, but it certainly worked for me.
 
A Quad isn't that roasty, so I don't see a real need or desire to push the pH too high. You might get away with 5.5, but I would target the 5.3 to 5.4 range.
 
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