I am assuming that what you are saying is that your pH reading was "roughly" 5.0 and that the sample was tested at 149*. Correct?
Correct. I don't think I can say "5.0 pH" if I'm using strips.
Two things. It looks like you used too much acid malt and not enough calcium chloride. The primer suggests 2% acid malt as the base and AJ even suggests only putting in half of that amount, testing to see where that gets you, then adding the rest if you need it.
You are correct regarding the base. However, the primer addresses soft water beers specifically with 1/2 the baseline amount of Calcium Chloride and increasing the sauermalz (acidulated malt) to 3%. This is what I went with. I had my concerns about this also applying to a light blonde ale recipe and that's what my post yesterday was about. But I never got any replies addressing that specific question, so I proceeded as planned. I know I should have posted my question a lot earlier than the morning of my brew day.
It's unclear to me how you calculated the calcium chloride addition. From what I understand a teaspoon of calcium chloride weighs very close to 5 grams. Thus the 1 teaspoon per 5 gallons of brewing water works out to roughly one gram per gallon. If you had 8 gallons of brewing water, you would need 8 grams of calcium chloride.
I went by another post in this thread in which ajdelange indicated a teaspoon of CaCl was 3.2 grams. So, based on that and the soft water guidelines, I halved that to 1.6 grams for 5 gallons for a light ale, fed it to BeerSmith, and it in turn calculated 2.72 grams for 8.51 gallons.
PS: Congrats on your first AG!![]()
Thanks, man! I gotta tell you, it was awesome! I totally loved it. I was already doing partial mashes (for a year), so the jump wasn't that much of a change. But I totally dig the control, the freshness, and even the geeky stuff like water chemistry.