Andrew Walsh
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Silly me accidentally spilled about 10ml phosphoric acid (96%) into boiling wort when doing pH adjustment for a dunkle bock. pH dropped to 4.7 and stayed there but after adding NaOH I eventually got the pH back up to 5.1. Water treatment has the water salt profile prior to the accident at about 50 ppm Calcium, 34 ppm sulphate and 100 ppm chloride.
So now I figure there will be a ton of phosphate buffering the beer. Although the yeast should metabolize some of the phosphate there may well be too much and the phosphate will keep the beer pH too high, somewhere around 4.7 as it was in the boil.
What is the best course of action to fix this? I figure CaCl2 and/or gypsum additions to precipitate out the phosphate. But which one and when to add?
Beer is not bubbling yet. My thinking is to wait until pH gets stuck and do something then. If I add too much of either I risk an acidic beer. There is already a fair amount of chloride in the water so I probably have more headroom with gypsum. But what happens to the sulphate if adding at the end of fermentation?I want to avoid rotten egg beer if possible. Yeast is S-189.
Thoughts appreciated.
So now I figure there will be a ton of phosphate buffering the beer. Although the yeast should metabolize some of the phosphate there may well be too much and the phosphate will keep the beer pH too high, somewhere around 4.7 as it was in the boil.
What is the best course of action to fix this? I figure CaCl2 and/or gypsum additions to precipitate out the phosphate. But which one and when to add?
Beer is not bubbling yet. My thinking is to wait until pH gets stuck and do something then. If I add too much of either I risk an acidic beer. There is already a fair amount of chloride in the water so I probably have more headroom with gypsum. But what happens to the sulphate if adding at the end of fermentation?I want to avoid rotten egg beer if possible. Yeast is S-189.
Thoughts appreciated.