Guys, I've been having problems with my hefe's always being low mash efficiency. 3 from 3 strike rate of about 6 or 7 gravity points low when measuring post mash and it's been driving me crazy.
All my malt based beers have been fine and there abouts just wheat beer efficiency is way down.
I've never looked at water chem before, but decided to look up my water analysis and plug it into EZ Water. To my surprise when using my regular APA or IPA grain bills pH calculates around 5.6 based on my water profile.
When I put in my hefe grain bill pH calculates around 6.1. Since found darker malts lower the mash pH which makes sense.
I am presuming this high pH issue is at least contributing to my poor mash efficiency, (if not the total cause) but wondering if anyone knows the correlation and how much a bad pH can contribute to this?
I have some lactic acid and salts on order to adjust and try this one more time but appreciate any thoughts on this and what others have experienced when brewing wheat beers. (Might be one for Les)
Cheers
All my malt based beers have been fine and there abouts just wheat beer efficiency is way down.
I've never looked at water chem before, but decided to look up my water analysis and plug it into EZ Water. To my surprise when using my regular APA or IPA grain bills pH calculates around 5.6 based on my water profile.
When I put in my hefe grain bill pH calculates around 6.1. Since found darker malts lower the mash pH which makes sense.
I am presuming this high pH issue is at least contributing to my poor mash efficiency, (if not the total cause) but wondering if anyone knows the correlation and how much a bad pH can contribute to this?
I have some lactic acid and salts on order to adjust and try this one more time but appreciate any thoughts on this and what others have experienced when brewing wheat beers. (Might be one for Les)
Cheers