I've been looking into water profiles as I slowly gain more knowledge in how to improve my brews. At this stage I think my water is 'generally OK' but there are some factors that I think might be contributing to my mash efficiency being a bit low.
I full volume BIAB, mill (in thermomix) to a fair amount of flour, no sparge, no chill. I do not (yet) have any sort of water 'testing' gear, but entering everything into Bru'n'water shows some points that I would like to address.
Any thoughts / advice would be appreciated.
Part 1: Mash PH
In my usual 30L mash the calculated acidity in Bru'n'Water is 5.9, which is too high. I am thinking this is the cause of my lower than expected mash efficiencies (~70%). It would take ~8% acidulated malt (400g) to bring this down to 5.5 for a 4.5kg grist. I'm not sure whether acidulated malt or acid adjustments would be best but it seems like any acid additions can cause major flavour changes so I'm a bit concerned here.
With a moderate hardness I don't want to add 5.2, as I have heard it can cause off flavours.
Part 2: Flavour Profile
My water profile according to the WA Water Corp 2014 published details should be close to:
Hardness: 122
Total Alkalinity (as CaC03): 61
Ca: 24.5
Mg: 14.8
Na: 100
K: (unknown)
Fe: 0.02
Reported PH: 7.5
Bicarbonate: 73.7 (report matches the value calculated from Total Alkalinity)
Carbonate: 36.6
Sulphate: 100 (I got this from a different source, so may be suspect - I did a quick calculation using the AlS04 molecular weights and ended up with 0.48, but that seems a very low sulphate value)
Cl: 174
Nitrate: 0.2
Nitrite (unknown)
F: 0.8
I am a bit confused by the Carbonate and Mg values - Bru'n'water states "Carbonate/Magnesium may be reported in (as CaCO3) units and must be converted to (ppm) by multiplying by x"
Does this statement mean I can take the "total alkalinity as CaCO3" and calculate the Carbonate/Magnesium values, or does it mean that along with "Total alkalinity as CaCO3" you may also have "Carbonate as CaCO3" and "Magnesium as CaCO3". I took it to mean the former.
The above values end up with a cation/anion difference of 2.68 which is clearly wrong, if I 0 out the Mg/Carbonate/Sulphate I get 0.58 which is still outside the expected values.
Bru'n'water suggests that my calcium is low (24ppm), my sodium is bordering on high (100ppm), sulphate is bordering on high (100ppm), chloride is high (174ppm). The only way I can see to fix this is dilution with ~50% distilled water (barring my own RO which I don't plan on getting, is 'spring water' acceptable?) and then top up with gypsum. At 50% dilution + .1g/L I end up with:
Ca, Mg, Na, Sulphate, Chloride, Bicarbonate
35.5, 7.4, 50, 105.8, 87, 67.4
Sulphate is amber (high) and Calcium is probably still a bit low, but everything else looks within parameters. This would also end up with a calculated mash PH of 5.7 which would reduce the need to add as much acidulated malt.
I full volume BIAB, mill (in thermomix) to a fair amount of flour, no sparge, no chill. I do not (yet) have any sort of water 'testing' gear, but entering everything into Bru'n'water shows some points that I would like to address.
Any thoughts / advice would be appreciated.
Part 1: Mash PH
In my usual 30L mash the calculated acidity in Bru'n'Water is 5.9, which is too high. I am thinking this is the cause of my lower than expected mash efficiencies (~70%). It would take ~8% acidulated malt (400g) to bring this down to 5.5 for a 4.5kg grist. I'm not sure whether acidulated malt or acid adjustments would be best but it seems like any acid additions can cause major flavour changes so I'm a bit concerned here.
With a moderate hardness I don't want to add 5.2, as I have heard it can cause off flavours.
Part 2: Flavour Profile
My water profile according to the WA Water Corp 2014 published details should be close to:
Hardness: 122
Total Alkalinity (as CaC03): 61
Ca: 24.5
Mg: 14.8
Na: 100
K: (unknown)
Fe: 0.02
Reported PH: 7.5
Bicarbonate: 73.7 (report matches the value calculated from Total Alkalinity)
Carbonate: 36.6
Sulphate: 100 (I got this from a different source, so may be suspect - I did a quick calculation using the AlS04 molecular weights and ended up with 0.48, but that seems a very low sulphate value)
Cl: 174
Nitrate: 0.2
Nitrite (unknown)
F: 0.8
I am a bit confused by the Carbonate and Mg values - Bru'n'water states "Carbonate/Magnesium may be reported in (as CaCO3) units and must be converted to (ppm) by multiplying by x"
Does this statement mean I can take the "total alkalinity as CaCO3" and calculate the Carbonate/Magnesium values, or does it mean that along with "Total alkalinity as CaCO3" you may also have "Carbonate as CaCO3" and "Magnesium as CaCO3". I took it to mean the former.
The above values end up with a cation/anion difference of 2.68 which is clearly wrong, if I 0 out the Mg/Carbonate/Sulphate I get 0.58 which is still outside the expected values.
Bru'n'water suggests that my calcium is low (24ppm), my sodium is bordering on high (100ppm), sulphate is bordering on high (100ppm), chloride is high (174ppm). The only way I can see to fix this is dilution with ~50% distilled water (barring my own RO which I don't plan on getting, is 'spring water' acceptable?) and then top up with gypsum. At 50% dilution + .1g/L I end up with:
Ca, Mg, Na, Sulphate, Chloride, Bicarbonate
35.5, 7.4, 50, 105.8, 87, 67.4
Sulphate is amber (high) and Calcium is probably still a bit low, but everything else looks within parameters. This would also end up with a calculated mash PH of 5.7 which would reduce the need to add as much acidulated malt.