runningweird
Well-Known Member
fantastic. I can brew now right?
now it's time to get a ph meter and become a real boy.
now it's time to get a ph meter and become a real boy.
With the amount of alkalinity in that tap water, you wouldn't need to be adding lime to the mash to alter its pH. So hopefully that is not the case.
so I don't need to add lime to it at all? I was concerned with excess bitterness from the high temporary hardness.
I just can't wrap my head around water chemistry
Uh oh! We might have led you astray. Lime treatment for water is a pre-treatment. With your water, you don't want any more alkalinity in the mash. Its already too high for most brewing. Acid is what you need to be adding to most mashes when brewing with that water. Are you using Bru'n Water?
Employing acid is far better than using the 5.2 stuff. 5.2 can add flavor that you may not want in your beer.
Wow, that is a lot of alkalinity. You might get by with phosphoric acid, but another option for you to consider...since you have the lime, you could pretreat your tap water and drop out some of the calcium and alkalinity. Then the water could serve as a better starting point for brewing. You really need a pH meter if you are doing this though.
the problem, as I saw it, was that there wasn't enough straight calcium in the water to start with to complete the reaction, so I was ending up with some left over lime in the water.
In the first place, you would probably have difficulty obtaining calcium.