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- Jun 1, 2024
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Hello,
I've been all-grain brewing for a year now, and I'm planning my 12th brew which will be my first attempt at a stout.
I want to get into water chemistry this time, and after lots of reading and pondering I started using the water calculator here on Brewer's Friend.
But there is something bugging me:
The mash pH estimation says it is for a sample cooled to room temp. And I understand, from Palmer's book, that the mash pH is 0.3-0.35 pH lower at mash temp compared to room temp.
With my water profile, (which is medium-hard, residual alkalinity is ~100 ppm as CaCO3), and my dark stout grist, the calculator is estimating a mash pH (at room temp) of 5.7. There's a little orange arrow saying this is a bit high. But if this is a room temp, then at mash temp it's more like 5.35-5.4. Isn't that pretty ideal? Why is the calculator telling me it's too high?
I've been all-grain brewing for a year now, and I'm planning my 12th brew which will be my first attempt at a stout.
I want to get into water chemistry this time, and after lots of reading and pondering I started using the water calculator here on Brewer's Friend.
But there is something bugging me:
The mash pH estimation says it is for a sample cooled to room temp. And I understand, from Palmer's book, that the mash pH is 0.3-0.35 pH lower at mash temp compared to room temp.
With my water profile, (which is medium-hard, residual alkalinity is ~100 ppm as CaCO3), and my dark stout grist, the calculator is estimating a mash pH (at room temp) of 5.7. There's a little orange arrow saying this is a bit high. But if this is a room temp, then at mash temp it's more like 5.35-5.4. Isn't that pretty ideal? Why is the calculator telling me it's too high?