I'd bet 100% they have an RO system to strip their water down before brewing.
aTm '99
AlaskanAg99 said:
I'd bet 100% they have an RO system to strip their water down before brewing.
Alright, here is my most recent water report.Ornlu said:
Nah, it's not too bad.
Does your water report list any of these?
- pH
- Total Hardness (HCO or CaCO3 equivalent)
- Alkalinity or Bicarbonate
Ornlu said:
Total dissolved solid is 165 ppm. That's the sum of all the minerals, so Ca, CO3, Copper, bromide, etc all have to sum to 165. Given the other mineral levels in the report, I'd wager $0.02 that it's like 40 ppm Ca and 100ppm Carbonate (ish).
I use this $15 one for salt additions and it works well, FWIW.Ornlu said:
Those are your mineral and acid additions, seperated into sparge and mash volumes. Now.... you just might have to buy a better scale to measure quantities that small. Just sprinkle the mash salts on top of your grain before you start to stir in. The sparge salts need to be stirred into the sparge water.
Thank you for the technical info!lne2011 said:
154 is the borderline for certain enzymes to be active to cut long chain sugars into smaller chains. Since you ended up on the high dide, you could have denatured this enzyme. This will leave those long chain sugars intact.
Not the end of the world, but you may not hit your final gravity. The yeast won't consume all of the long chain sugars leaving a higher final gravity.
Chipotlemonger said:
A couple of random notes to add:
- I feel that I am getting a little better at getting near my target OG. Would really like it to improve though. Hit 1.055-1.056 on my amber, was aiming for 1.058. I know grain is relatively cheap but I want my efficiency to still improve because it's lower than desired right now.
- I had to revamp my recipe mid boil on this amber due to an issue with my hops. Was using a combo of Warrior and Ahtanum, and didn't realize these bags were TWO ounces and not just ONE. Measured out my first hop addition of Warrior and used just fine, but then my initial 2nd addition (combo of the hops) was messed up because it wasn't really "the rest of the bag" as I had thought, and once I mixed I could not unmix.
- I redid the recipe using a 50/50 alpha acid combo to figure out IBU potential. We shall see, I think this is going to be a hoppy amber. Hope it's good! I'm not too mad though. Like I said, my main purpose for the batch was to try these 2 hops on hand out and get more practice on my system.
I have two of theseOrnlu said:
Do any of y'all store your CO2 talk outside your kegerator? If so, how did you do the bulkhead to bring the lines inside? Also, do you have any problems with the gas source being warm (garage temp) but the lines being cold, like condensation?
I was able to do this on an old typical fridge when I had some kegs in it. Red gas line fit very snugly through the drain hole in bottom of floor.AlaskanAg99 said:
You might be able to snake a hose through the drain.
Chipotlemonger said:
For the mash, I have heard if you let the temp go down it can release the proper enzymes even if you started hotter? Is this true? For example, let it drop from 170 to 155, then put the lid back on my mash tun and wait a bit
...
Anyone else ever have this issue? What did you do with the high FG finish beer?
I will brew a proper amber ale by golly!fav13andac1)c said:
This weather make anyone else want to brew?
Either my octoberfest (called Marzen for a reason!) or a belgian dubbel.fav13andac1)c said:
Nice! What are you brewing? I'm thinking I might brew a blonde or a table beer. Something crushable.