PlinyTheMiddleAged
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Brewed tasty mcdoles session pale ale.
Mash pH @15 = 5.45
Pre boil pH = 5.34
Post boil pH = 5.3
I kind of thought the post boil pH would have been lower, but this is the firs time I've measured it. Thoughts?
I would have thought that the pH would drop more from pre-boil to post-boil as well. Maybe since pH is a logarithmic scale and the boil is driving off a relatively small percentage of water and leaving the salts in place, the pH isn't changing much.
I just ran a quick experiment with Bru'n Water to confirm the above guess. I added gypsum and calcium chloride to the default grist to approximate the pale ale profile. I ended up with a mash pH of 5.3. If I doubled the salt additions (effectively boiling off half the water in an excel spreadsheet) I got a projected mash pH of 5.0.
So, if we boil off half our water, we should see a drop in pH of 0.3. Since we boil off much less than that, the pH drop will be much smaller.
An even easier way too look at this is to simply take the log base 10 of the wort volume post boil to pre boil. Again, if I boil 5 gallons down to 2.5 gallons, log10(2.5/5.0)=-0.3. I'd predict the same drop in pH as Bru'n Water says it should be. Using a more reasonable boil off rate, boiling 6.25 gallons down to 5.0 gallons would give me a pH drop of log10(5.0/6.25)=-0.097 - my meter would show a drop of 0.10 pH.
Still, your drop is even smaller - unless your boil off rate is really low or your pH measurements are slightly off.