Local brewery is doing an interactive brew and has shared the homebrew recipe. Sweet!!
I want to brew this as my first batch using RO water this weekend. Have always just used tap water at my old house and things came out pretty well. I've played with the Bru'n Water sheet some, tried the calculator on Brewer's Friend, have skimmed through the water section in my Palmer book, and read about a thousand posts on water chemisty here and other interweb sources. It's a bit overwhelming at the moment. I'll get it eventually I'm sure... but was hoping for the 'easy answer' to get started with my first RO brew. What should I add to the water for this 5 gallon batch (fly sparge)?
Grain Bill:
2 Row – 13# / 70%
C-120 – 1# / 6%
Carapils – 1# / 6%
Flaked Oats – 1# / 6%
Caramalt – .5# / 3%
Roasted Barley – .5# / 3%
Chocolate Wheat – .5# / 3%
Munich – .5# / 3%
Water Profile:
High on Carbonate (200 ppm) with a semi-balanced Sulfate to Chloride ratio.
Sulfate: 50-100 ppm Chloride: 100 ppm
Aiming for a pH of 5.50
This is going to be a thick mash at 3.5#/gal.
Rest at 155F for an hour.
I want to brew this as my first batch using RO water this weekend. Have always just used tap water at my old house and things came out pretty well. I've played with the Bru'n Water sheet some, tried the calculator on Brewer's Friend, have skimmed through the water section in my Palmer book, and read about a thousand posts on water chemisty here and other interweb sources. It's a bit overwhelming at the moment. I'll get it eventually I'm sure... but was hoping for the 'easy answer' to get started with my first RO brew. What should I add to the water for this 5 gallon batch (fly sparge)?
Grain Bill:
2 Row – 13# / 70%
C-120 – 1# / 6%
Carapils – 1# / 6%
Flaked Oats – 1# / 6%
Caramalt – .5# / 3%
Roasted Barley – .5# / 3%
Chocolate Wheat – .5# / 3%
Munich – .5# / 3%
Water Profile:
High on Carbonate (200 ppm) with a semi-balanced Sulfate to Chloride ratio.
Sulfate: 50-100 ppm Chloride: 100 ppm
Aiming for a pH of 5.50
This is going to be a thick mash at 3.5#/gal.
Rest at 155F for an hour.