Blind Dog
Beer
- Joined
- 30/7/13
- Messages
- 1,714
- Reaction score
- 793
Wobbly
Just put your numbers from post #14 through EZ water and end up with a mash pH at room temp of 5.4 without any acid addition (but after the 100g of acidulated malt and after the salt additions you mention), and all minerals except magnesium (which you don't mention) in the desired ranges. Personally, I'd be happy with that and wouldn't be looking to add acid.
I now brew with filtered Melbourne water and treat it as a blank canvas as even before filtering it has little in the way of minerals or hardness. I rarely need to add more than a small percentage of acidulated malt, even for light beer, to get the pH of the mash to 5.4 or thereabouts. My measurements are with low range pH strips, so maybe not that reliable, but as they've always matched the EZ water calc, I've never been that concerned. In terms of salt additions, I tend to add only calcium chloride and epsom salts and balance on the malty side; gypsum makes only an occasional appearance. The results have been good and I now rarely bother to measure mash pH
Just put your numbers from post #14 through EZ water and end up with a mash pH at room temp of 5.4 without any acid addition (but after the 100g of acidulated malt and after the salt additions you mention), and all minerals except magnesium (which you don't mention) in the desired ranges. Personally, I'd be happy with that and wouldn't be looking to add acid.
I now brew with filtered Melbourne water and treat it as a blank canvas as even before filtering it has little in the way of minerals or hardness. I rarely need to add more than a small percentage of acidulated malt, even for light beer, to get the pH of the mash to 5.4 or thereabouts. My measurements are with low range pH strips, so maybe not that reliable, but as they've always matched the EZ water calc, I've never been that concerned. In terms of salt additions, I tend to add only calcium chloride and epsom salts and balance on the malty side; gypsum makes only an occasional appearance. The results have been good and I now rarely bother to measure mash pH