user 246304
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Double post.
And this is going to sound ridiculous, but using RO water only in the sparge just...bugs me, lol. Doesn't feel right and I've no earthly reason why, yet. Go figure. The only thing I can come up with aligns with some of what AJ said above - one water, just used throughout the brewhouse. Unlike AJ's, however, grounded in science, mine is more of the myth of virginal brewing water, I'm afraid. Stuff comes out of the ground perfect for bitters, etc.
Makes perfect sense, Brewsader, and thanks for clearing it up. This whole approach is a new thing for me, and something I'll have to work out if I'm to do it. Kettle additions, for instance - when you treat mash water, those salts are reacting with mash-based compounds, and in addition they're being retained behind. What sorts of calculations do you use, if you're adding in minerals to the kettle?
And this is going to sound ridiculous, but using RO water only in the sparge just...bugs me, lol. Doesn't feel right and I've no earthly reason why, yet. Go figure. The only thing I can come up with aligns with some of what AJ said above - one water, just used throughout the brewhouse. Unlike AJ's, however, grounded in science, mine is more of the myth of virginal brewing water, I'm afraid. Stuff comes out of the ground perfect for bitters, etc.