water adjustment, sanity check

Fri Feb 05, 2010 7:39 am

hi
i've been trying to understand how to adjust my water according to different styles. i've listened to the water episodes on brew strong and read through john palmers book.

i've been playing around with the ez_water_adjustment spreadsheet, but i wanted to get some feedback if i'm on the right track.

i've been focusing on the RA and the cloride to sulfide ratio.
i created a table, with my adjustments and how the resulting C/S ratio, the target C/S and resulting RA. can you comment on this. does this make sense?
Image

i made the calculations for 40 liters of water. when using lactic acid, i would blend it to the HLT (40 liters), but for the salts, i would adjust for the total water (% of 40 liters), put half in the mash tun and half in the kettle.

and my spreadsheet
kristfin
 
Posts: 28
Joined: Wed Nov 25, 2009 1:18 pm

Re: water adjustment, sanity check

Sat Feb 06, 2010 8:00 pm

i don't know if i do it right but i add gypsum and chalk in the boil only. i have very soft water
my name is Richard Edward, just call me Dick Ed.
speed
 
Posts: 879
Joined: Sat Jun 04, 2005 12:05 pm
Location: nebraska

Re: water adjustment, sanity check

Sat Feb 06, 2010 8:13 pm

To begin with you are fortunate in having a water of such low mineral content. You can easily augment it for any style you would like to brew.

The water as it is would be excellent for Bohemian Pilsner. There is no need to do anything to it. Pilsen water runs to about 10 ppm as CaCO3 effective hardness and about 10 ppm as CaCO3 alkalinity with an RA near 0. Your water has an effective hardness of about 13.5, RA of 16 and alkalinity of 20. Were you to add even as little as 0.5 gram of chalk to 40 litres of this water with 4 mL of 88% lactic acid and 0.7 g MgSO4.7h2O the pH would rise to around 8.5 (assuming it was at about 7 to begin with) and the residual alkalinity would go up to around 23 In a Bohemian Pilsner you do not need anything raising your RA - you will require acid of some sort to get mash pH into the 5.2 - 5.4 region so why put in carbonate and then acid to partly neutralize that and then acid more to set mash pH? Just skip the carbonate and then all your acid can go towards pH establishment. As a rule of thumb you will need about 1% sauermalz (or it's equivalent in lactic acid) for each 0.1 drop in pH. From 0 RA (about where you are now) you would expect dough-in pH of about 5.75 which is 0.4 pH above 5.35 so approximately 4% sauermalz would be needed. You should probably also skip the epsom salts. Magnesium doesn't contribute much to RA reduction (1 ppm as CaCO3 in this case i.e. 0.7 gram addition) but it does add 6.8 mg/L sulfate to get you up to a total of 8.8. While that's not a lot of sulfate the general opinion of continental lager brewers is that a good cholride to sulfate ratio is infinity - i.e. as little sulfate as possible.

For Dortmund: Even with 3 mL of lactic acid 5 grams of chalk would not dissolve. To get it to would require lots more lactic acid (148.8 mL) and render the beer rather lactic tasting. The way mother nature would get it to dissolve would be with carbonic acid and if you used that in sufficient quantity to dissolve it and get to pH 7 you would wind up with (assuming 10 mg/L epsom salts as well) an alkalinity of 146 and an effective hardness of 189 with an RA of about +92. Whether these are reasonable numbers for Dortmund are not is questionable. I have four reports for Dortmund water all of which put the effective harndess in the 600's. Three list the alkalinity at about 140 and the 4th puts it off the charts at around 445. Of the four, the last is the only one which comes close to balancing electrically. Taking that report as valid (because it is at least feasible) results in an overwhelming RA of 252. The alkalinity/harness question aside it is clear that Dortmund water is relatively high in chloride (53-100 ppm), sodium (60 - 70) and sulfate (120-318). Your water as adjusted per your spreasheet would have chloride at 54 mg/L, sodium at 38 and sulfate at 11.7 so clearly you need to add some salts to increase each of those. Given the RA of 252 Dortmund brewers would have to decarbonate their water. There is little point in going to the trouble to dissolve carbonate only to turn around and take it out so I recommend synthesis of water that is like decarbonated Dortmund water.

The following additions: 3.615 g NaCl; 12.597 g CaSO4.2H2O; 8.005 g MgSO4.7H2O; 0.238 g CaCO3; 2.563g NaHCO3 will give you a water with Ca at 80 mg/L; Mg at 20.6 mg/L; Sulfate at 256, Chloride at 63.8; sodium at 62 and a residual alkalinity of -5. Assuming your water's pH is 7, the adjusted water would have a pH of about 8. This would be suitable for brewing a Dortmunder but some acid will be required to lower pH into the desired region.

It would take me forever to continue for all the other cities in your spreadsheet. I hope that these two examples will be enough to give you an idea of what is required. The general approach is to find out as much as you can about the water that gave rise to the style and to synthesize the broad properties of that.
ajdelange
 
Posts: 1386
Joined: Wed May 27, 2009 9:18 am

Re: water adjustment, sanity check

Mon Feb 08, 2010 5:19 am

i'm starting to really regret having not paid more attention while attending chemistry in school :)

so for pilsen, i should be focusing on the RA and minimizing the sulfate. doing nothing but adding 3ml of 88% lactic acid gives me -29 RA and c/s of 20. i assume that is good for pilsen then. i was under the impression that i should try to get the same c/s ratio as in pilsen water, but hey, what do i know.

with the dortmund water, with your numbers i end up with RA=-8 and c/s 0,26.

would it be safe for me to say that i'm doing it wrong for pilsen and dortmund since i'm mixing chalk and acid in those, can i assume that my numbers for the rest are more in the general direction, or are those number obviously off
kristfin
 
Posts: 28
Joined: Wed Nov 25, 2009 1:18 pm

Re: water adjustment, sanity check

Fri Feb 12, 2010 6:59 am

kristfin wrote:so for pilsen, i should be focusing on the RA and minimizing the sulfate.


Your water is so low in minerals that its RA is only about 16 which you can ignore. Low sulfate is always a good idea where noble hops are to be used. At 2 mg/L you definitely have low sulfate. So the conclusion is to do nothing to this water (but see below).

kristfin wrote:doing nothing but adding 3ml of 88% lactic acid gives me -29 RA and c/s of 20.


Adding 3 mL 88% lactic acid to 40 L of this water would drop the pH to under 4. At pH < 4.3 RA becomes meaningless but if you just stuff the numbers into the equations you would calculate RA of about -7 which if stuffed into the usual formula would cause you to conclude your mash pH would be 0.01 unit less than a distilled water mash or about 5.75 - 0.01 = 5.74. In fact adding 3 mL lactic acid should get you to a reasonable mash pH by the following reasoning:

Assuming you want a 12 °P beer each litre of wort would weigh approximately 1.046 kG and contain 1.046*0.12 = 125.5 grams extract. Assuming you acheive 75% efficiency in mashing that means that you would need 125.5/.75 = 167 grams of malt per litre of wort and for 40 litres thus 6.7 kg. Assuming you want mash pH to be 5.35 and the mash with your water, untreated, comes in at about 5.75 you would try 4% sauermalz (this is a "rule of thumb" - 1% sauermalz for each 0.1 pH drop) for 0.04*6700 = 268 grams. As sauermalz contains, on average, about 1.5% lactic acid that implies that the sauermalz could be replaced by 268*0.015 = 4.02 grams of lactic acid. Your specified 3 mL of 88% acid would give 3.18 grams and is thus in the rough ballpark i.e. a reasonable place to start. Thus procedure would be to dough in with the untreated water, allow some time for thorough wetting, solubilization etc and then add 2 (i.e. 2/3 of the 3) mL of acid to the mash. After a few minutes run a pH check and see if you like the pH. If it is too low, raise to protein rest temperature and then check pH again. If it is still too low, add some chalk. If, on the other hand, it is too high, add more lactic in, say, 0.5 mL increments. With experience you will know what to expect and how much acid you are likely to need. Of course you can add the acid to the water before you mash in but doing it in the mash tun gives you the flexibility to add it incrementally while monitoring pH.

kristfin wrote: i assume that is good for pilsen then. i was under the impression that i should try to get the same c/s ratio as in pilsen water, but hey, what do i know.


For Bohemian Pilsner you would mash in with your water untreated and add sauermalz or lactic acid in order to adjust mash pH. AFAIK that's what they do in the Czech Republic. In that part of the world they are not concerned with chloride sulfate ratio. They just want as little sulfate as they can get. Your water is certainly low sulfate and so you need not worry about this either.

kristfin wrote:with the dortmund water, with your numbers i end up with RA=-8 and c/s 0,26.


RA depends on the definition of alkalinity and the definition of alkalinity is somewhat arbitrary as the analyst is free to choose whatever end point he chooses for the titration as long as he specifies it in the report. . I always assume that is pH 4.3 which gives me an RA of about -8 (so I must have made a typo in the previous post). If I use an end point pH of 4.76 (which is the equivalence end point) RA becomes -10. RA also depends on the pH of your water which I don't know. In any case these levels of RA are small enough that you might as well assume that they are 0.

kristfin wrote:would it be safe for me to say that i'm doing it wrong for pilsen and dortmund since i'm mixing chalk and acid in those, can i assume that my numbers for the rest are more in the general direction, or are those number obviously off


I don't have the time to check them all but in general, if you are adding chalk to brewing water in other than very small quantities you are doing something wrong. In brewing water chemistry the general rule is "alkalinity bad - hardness good". A quick check on the Burton profile shows a lot of chalk that will not dissolve unless acid is added. As your sulfate from Epsom salts is only 50 mg/L sulfuric acid is an obvious choice though enough sulfuric acid to dissolve that much chalk and bring pH to 7, 1.8 mL of 98% acid, would only bring the sulfate to 128 mg/L far shy of what Burton water is like WRT this ion. So here you would need to skip the chalk and add lots of gypsum, which is the source of sulfate in Burton water. If you do this you will have a low carbonate water with high sulfate which should give you decent mash pH without requiring acid (though you should check mash pH and verify this). A glance at the Dublin profile shows incredible amounts of chalk. Again skip this but check mash pH.

Unfortunately there are no simple generalities for setting up brewing water. You need to research each style of beer, understand the water chemistry of the region from which it came and determine which parts of the mineral profile have mostly flavor (sulfate, chloride, sodium, magnesium) effects and which mostly influence mash pH (calcium, magnesium, bicarbonate).

There are lots of places on the web where you can find recipes for water of a particular region (including my website: http://www.wetnewf.org) based on deionized water (you qualify) but you must bear in mind that putting one of these together going to the trouble of getting the carbonate to dissolve only to have it fall right back out as soon is the water is heated is a waste of time. You should also bear in mind that many of the water profiles that one finds on the web, in books and magazine articles are not valid water profiles which means that they can't exist in nature so you can't synthesize them.

I recommend posting a question here on how to treat the water for each beer as you brew it. You will get feedback from several people with different viewpoints but their recommendations shouldn''t vary that much. Just ignore any that tries to get you to use lots of chalk.
ajdelange
 
Posts: 1386
Joined: Wed May 27, 2009 9:18 am

Re: water adjustment, sanity check

Fri Feb 12, 2010 7:48 am

thank you very much.

i think it is a good idea, not to swallow the elephant whole, but one bite at a time.

i actually made my first water adjustments the other day. when i used my table for jamils orval clone. i used half for the mash and half in the boiler.

btw, when i try to open your web http://www.wetnewf.org/ i have no success.
kristfin
 
Posts: 28
Joined: Wed Nov 25, 2009 1:18 pm

Re: water adjustment, sanity check

Fri Feb 12, 2010 8:59 am

Try again. The daemon that sends the IP address to the DNS servers was hung up. If no response wait a few minutes for the address to propagate and then try again.
ajdelange
 
Posts: 1386
Joined: Wed May 27, 2009 9:18 am

Return to Brewing Ingredients

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users

A BIT ABOUT US

The Brewing Network is a multimedia resource for brewers and beer lovers. Since 2005, we have been the leader in craft beer entertainment and information with live beer radio, podcasts, video, events and more.