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Hello fellow zymurgists,
I am an extract brewer, after 25 batches getting ready to make my first forays into all-grain brews. The specifics:
Palmer says: "It is important to understand that the mash pH will decrease slowly throughout the hour-long mash, that conversion happens relatively quickly, and that enzymes can be rapidly denatured by a combination of non-optimum pHand high temperature. In other words, attempting to fix a mash pH that is too low or too high may take too long to be effective. You will probably do better by planning ahead with water or recipe changes for the next batch." (How to Brew, 4th ed. 2017, pg. 341)
And now to the question. Should I simply brew away, take a baseline pH measurement so I know what to "tweak" next time; OR should I pre-emptively adjust the water somehow?
Thanks in advance to the Hive Mind.
I am an extract brewer, after 25 batches getting ready to make my first forays into all-grain brews. The specifics:
- My setup will be BIAB and I will stay with 5 gallon batches and bottle conditioning at least for now.
- I use an activated charcoal water filter, which does a good job of removing chlorine/chloramine flavor and odor, but I'm not clear on how it changes the water chemistry as a whole. My assumption would be that this renders the water basically "tabula rasa" but I don't really know.
- I'm planning on my first try being something reliable and straightforward, like a California Common.
Palmer says: "It is important to understand that the mash pH will decrease slowly throughout the hour-long mash, that conversion happens relatively quickly, and that enzymes can be rapidly denatured by a combination of non-optimum pHand high temperature. In other words, attempting to fix a mash pH that is too low or too high may take too long to be effective. You will probably do better by planning ahead with water or recipe changes for the next batch." (How to Brew, 4th ed. 2017, pg. 341)
And now to the question. Should I simply brew away, take a baseline pH measurement so I know what to "tweak" next time; OR should I pre-emptively adjust the water somehow?
Thanks in advance to the Hive Mind.