3.1kg Maris Otter
200g Crystal 60L
150g Crystal 120L
100g Chocolate
50g Black Patent
Aiming for 1.036. Efficiency was a bit higher than expected so I'll have to liquor it back a bit when I put it into the fermenter tomorrow (no-chilling this one).
26g of East Kent Goldings at 60 mins
Wyeast 1275 Thames Valley Ale harvested from my Best Bitter which was kegged on Tuesday.
Water was adjusted as follows:
6.6g CaSO4
11.4g CaCl
2.8g MgSO4
3.2g NaCl
0.2g CaCO3.
Fermented pretty slowly - took over a week to get down from 1.042 to 1.010. Not a good floccer - beer is still very cloudy 3 days after fining and kegging. Can't really comment on the flavour yet - the beer's still tasting very yeasty from the haziness.
That looks like a lot of brewing salts and the volumes look very specific. What's the theory behind it?
I wouldn't be able to measure 0.2g even if I wanted to.
I don't have the URL to hand, but it's an application on the Jim's Beer Kit website. I pop in the values from my water report (actually averaged the values for Ardmore and Waikato as our supply comes from both) then select the Mild profile and it suggests the grams of salts to add for the volume of water. I adjust my mash and sparge water pre-mash, although many people would recommend adding the salts actually to the mash.
I bought myself a new set of scales which will measure to 0.1g. Either find yourself a friendly P-dealer or buy em off TradeMe for about 20 bucks!
I've been listening to the Brewing Network Brew Strong podcasts about water adjustment, and there's some interesting stuff in there.