optimatored
Well-Known Member
I am saying that no stout has ever been brewed with water as alkaline as that which would result from the addition of this much CaCO3 (except by homebrewers following the same advice you propose to take) or, put another way, none of the well known brewing cities have water that alkaline. If they did no one would locate a brewery there.
From another perspective: if you were to make a mash with totally deionized water it will come to some pH. For a base malt that will be 5.75 - 5.8. With acid malts (dark crystal, roast) it will be lower. In my experiments and brewing I find that 10% roast barley produces something around 5.5 whereas 30% gives me 5.2. If I added chalk to the water mash pH would be appreciably higher and I don't want higher. In fact I want lower in my brewing where I use 10% roast barley but live with 5.5 and the result is a very good (IMO) stout. If I added some chalk to the water in order to be authentic (i.e. to represent Dublin water) the pH would go up but if I added reasonable amounts it would not be by that much - say to 5.6 which would still be OK but inching up. If I added as much as you propose the result would be a pasty, chalky, alkaselzer beer - flat and dull. At least that's what people who have followed programs like the one you are suggesting have reported to me.
You need to understand that the EZ and Palmer spreadsheets do not model carbonate additions correctly. To do so they would have to be appreciably more complicated than they are. IOW the results of the addition you propose will not be Ca = 201 nor alkalinity = 364. If you dump all that chalk into 4.25 gal of water it will not dissolve. If you allow it to settle and come to equilibrium you will wind up with hardness and alkalinity both about 50 ppm and both as CaCO3. This would not be an unreasonable level but would leave most of the chalk on the bottom of the HLT and the question would be "Why did I put it in in the first place?" If you stir it all up and mash with the suspension or add it all to the mash that is when you will realize all the negative effects.
You can certainly be stubborn if you wish and it might be a good learning experience for you. But first you might want to read through some of the posts in this thread focusing on other peoples' experiences.
I understand that the bucks for a pH meter may not be available so soon after Xmas but I strongly encourage brewers to make this investment as soon as they can. If you had a pH meter to hand you would only add chalk to beer if it were really necessary, would only use 5.2 once and would be secure in the knowledge that mash pH was under control. With meters available for under $100 they are a lot more accessible to homebrewers than they used to be.
This makes good sense now. There is a new version of the EZ spreadsheet I am using... and after reading through many more posts, I do not plan on adding any chalk and worrying more on pH and not color. Thanks AJ