Hello,
I've been playing around with Martin Brungard's "Bru'n Water" spreadsheet in preparation for first attempt at a stout (BCS Extra Stout). The general consensus in homebrew literature is that dark grain quickly push the mash pH below 5.2 (room temp reading), yet I'm finding with my relatively low alkaline water (23 ppm as CaCO3) that this is not the case, at least on the spreadsheet. Both Martin and Kai Troester suggest an optimal pH of 5.4 to 5.6 for stouts (5.3 - 5.5 otherwise), which is plumb where my predicted mash pH is (5.5), despite the dark grains and low alkalinity.
Below is my water composition:
Ca 7
Mg 5
Na 26
Cl 46
So4 7
HCO3 28
pH ~7.3
The grist is:
6.6kg Maris Otter (~2.5L)
340g Roast Barley (~500L)
280g Crystal 40
280g Crystal 80
230g Chocolate (~250L)
It could be that in practice the spreadsheet does not hold up. I guess I'm just surprised the pH reduction is not as dramatic as I was lead to believe. Does anyone have any experiences that would confirm or refute these results?
Cheers,
I've been playing around with Martin Brungard's "Bru'n Water" spreadsheet in preparation for first attempt at a stout (BCS Extra Stout). The general consensus in homebrew literature is that dark grain quickly push the mash pH below 5.2 (room temp reading), yet I'm finding with my relatively low alkaline water (23 ppm as CaCO3) that this is not the case, at least on the spreadsheet. Both Martin and Kai Troester suggest an optimal pH of 5.4 to 5.6 for stouts (5.3 - 5.5 otherwise), which is plumb where my predicted mash pH is (5.5), despite the dark grains and low alkalinity.
Below is my water composition:
Ca 7
Mg 5
Na 26
Cl 46
So4 7
HCO3 28
pH ~7.3
The grist is:
6.6kg Maris Otter (~2.5L)
340g Roast Barley (~500L)
280g Crystal 40
280g Crystal 80
230g Chocolate (~250L)
It could be that in practice the spreadsheet does not hold up. I guess I'm just surprised the pH reduction is not as dramatic as I was lead to believe. Does anyone have any experiences that would confirm or refute these results?
Cheers,