Yep - US-05 rehydrated and pitched/fermented at 18 degrees. I used 1.75 packs which I had in the fridge and were actually quite old, so happy that it got down.rude said:wow %80 attenuation was that us05 yeast ?
I use to use potassium metabisulfite for my tap water to rid chlorine
But happy with my R/O set up now except my attenuation has taken a hit
low %70 ies using us05 & nutrients
Just doesnt get as low 1013 1014 og 1050 mashing at 66c for Pale Ale 100g of crystal 500g of munich
the rest base malt
Anyway good thread lads
good4whatAlesU said:Had no vitamin C in the house, so last night I threw a Barocca in (half in mash water, half in Sparge water).
This could be interesting
I know this was a one off, but it got me thinking, so I did a little research.BKBrews said:It has 500mg Vitamin C, so should do the trick? I have no idea whether any of the other vitamins react with anything though - this thread has made it quite clear to me that I know absolutely nothing about chemistry
That is a good catch. That 1.7mg/l ascorbic addition was taken from a reference by Davis, Barrett, and McGuire (1985) which was published in the American Water Works Association. It referred to a dialysis solution, but stated that the dose would remove up to 3 mg/l chloramines. As pointed out by stoichiometry, that addition does not appear to be sufficient to remove that level of disinfectant.Lyrebird_Cycles said:Ascorbic acid MW = 176 g/mol, NH2Cl MW = 51 g/mol, stoichiometry as stated is 1: 1, therefore 176 / 51 ~ 3.5 mg/l ascorbic reacts with 1 mg /l of chloramine.
It looks to me like someone has made an arithmetical error in your reference, 1.7 mg/l ascorbic would be the required addition rate for 0.5 mg/l chloramine, not 3 mg/l.
Perhaps Martin can comment.
No problems.mabrungard said:That is a good catch.
The information on ascorbic acid use in the Water Knowledge section of the Bru'n Water website has been revised.
Thanks, that's very interesting, as you say some positives and maybe some negatives.Jack of all biers said:I know this was a one off, but it got me thinking, so I did a little research.
Other than the Vitamin C which has already been covered, Berocca tablets contain small amounts of Zinc (~10 mg) and the Vitamin B's which are mostly heat stable (not B5 - Pantothenic acid) so aren't denatured by heating the strike water before adding to the mash. Fortunately both Zinc and B vitamins are good as co-factors or co-enzymes for enzymes, which will help your mash and yeast along. It also contains Calcium (~100 mg), Magnesium (~100 mg) and Sodium (~274 mg) that will need to be taken into account with your water profile. The Zinc will also need to be taken into account if you make additions.
However.....
Some of the things to be aware of with adding Berocca tablets to your water, would be the unknown amounts of Sodium Hydrogen Carbonate (bicarb of soda) and Sodium Carbonate (the ingredients that make them fizz). Obviously these would need to be taken into account in your water profile and I'd assume make up a large part of the tablets contents so you would need to take the carbonate levels in your water into account (not so much of an issue if you have low carbonate levels in your water, but if you have hard water then adding more will not help your mash pH). Also adding carbonates to your water are Calcium Carbonate and Magnesium Carbonate (likely in smaller amounts). Also there is an anti-foaming agent in there to stop the liquid you place the tablet in from foaming over[/size] (Polysorbate 60 - [/size]polyoxyethylene (20) sorbitan monostearate) [It's a non-ionic surfactant and therefore the least toxic of surfactants. e.g. Polysorbate 80 is in most ice cream] . The amount in the tablet is unpublished, but if your brew volume was high and not a small batch it would probably be diluted enough not to effect the end product. Most emulsifiers are denatured when heated above 70C anyway, so the wort boil would likely finish it off.[/size]
So I guess positives and negatives. Food for thought for anyone who wants to add one to their water in the future though.[/size]
http://johnemsley.com/articles/wired/berocca.html
http://www.wired.co.uk/article/whats-inside-berocca
http://www.berocca.com.au/faqs/berocca-performance/
http://www.slideshare.net/arijabuhaniyeh/pharmaceutics-emulsions
Reporting back: The barocca beer turned out quite okay.Jack of all biers said:I know this was a one off, but it got me thinking, so I did a little research.
Other than the Vitamin C which has already been covered, Berocca tablets contain small amounts of Zinc (~10 mg) and the Vitamin B's which are mostly heat stable (not B5 - Pantothenic acid) so aren't denatured by heating the strike water before adding to the mash. Fortunately both Zinc and B vitamins are good as co-factors or co-enzymes for enzymes, which will help your mash and yeast along. It also contains Calcium (~100 mg), Magnesium (~100 mg) and Sodium (~274 mg) that will need to be taken into account with your water profile. The Zinc will also need to be taken into account if you make additions.
However.....
Some of the things to be aware of with adding Berocca tablets to your water, would be the unknown amounts of Sodium Hydrogen Carbonate (bicarb of soda) and Sodium Carbonate (the ingredients that make them fizz). Obviously these would need to be taken into account in your water profile and I'd assume make up a large part of the tablets contents so you would need to take the carbonate levels in your water into account (not so much of an issue if you have low carbonate levels in your water, but if you have hard water then adding more will not help your mash pH). Also adding carbonates to your water are Calcium Carbonate and Magnesium Carbonate (likely in smaller amounts). Also there is an anti-foaming agent in there to stop the liquid you place the tablet in from foaming over[/size] (Polysorbate 60 - [/size]polyoxyethylene (20) sorbitan monostearate) [It's a non-ionic surfactant and therefore the least toxic of surfactants. e.g. Polysorbate 80 is in most ice cream] . The amount in the tablet is unpublished, but if your brew volume was high and not a small batch it would probably be diluted enough not to effect the end product. Most emulsifiers are denatured when heated above 70C anyway, so the wort boil would likely finish it off.[/size]
So I guess positives and negatives. Food for thought for anyone who wants to add one to their water in the future though.[/size]
http://johnemsley.com/articles/wired/berocca.html
http://www.wired.co.uk/article/whats-inside-berocca
http://www.berocca.com.au/faqs/berocca-performance/
http://www.slideshare.net/arijabuhaniyeh/pharmaceutics-emulsions
I also use Brisbane tap water for all batches, other than pilsners where I distill it first, and I haven't had any problems with chloramines or chlorine affecting the flavour of my beers.
That said, earlier this year I decided to grab some potassium metabisulphite to remove chlorine/chloramines from the strike water, more as a preventative measure than anything./QUOTE]
I ended up getting an activated charcoal filter from the big green shed (the ones they use to filter water at caravan sites). This has removed my chlorine issues totally and is pretty easy too.Thanks for the input. Sounds like I am at the same place you were a few months ago.
I'll grab some absorbic acid powder from local chemist and add 375mg (i.e three pinches) to the 75 litres of water in the HLT. Sounds close enough to the 2.5 parts absorbic to 1 part chloramine mentioned above.
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