
Wanting to brew Mcewan 80/- Scottish Ale next fancied trying it with Edinburgh liquor as per Grahams Liquor Treatment Calculator, is this the best target liqour for 80/-?
Cheers
The water profiles are not the stuff that comes out of the ground, but target water; the stuff that the brewers would of brewed with, based on the fact that the brewers invariably boiled their water before use. Calcium carbonate has been removed.steve_flack wrote:The profile GW is using for Edinburgh doesn't agree with others I've seen. They have a lot more chalk in them than he suggests - the amounts in GWs look unrealistically low.
http://www.unm.edu/~draper/beer/waterpro.html
Edit: the London Tap looks iffy too - a cursory glance inside our tea urn at work would suggest there's a fair amount of calcium in there.
Which suggests you should probably taylor your water to what you're brewing rather than a single analysis of Edinburgh water.The brewers of Edinburgh have been both blessed and cursed by the water available to them for brewing. Blessed because the geology of the area can yield various types of water, thus allowing brewers to adapt to changed in beer styles and consumer tastes. (Recall that Edinburgh became a great producer of pale ales thanks to the availability of hard water.) But the curse also comes in this variability. More than one brewery has observed changes in the character of its well water that required drilling of a new well or complete relocation of the brewery. A consulting geologist explained this phenomenon in Noonan's work in Scotch ales: Edinburgh lies in the center of a heavily faulted, generally north-dipping pile of Lower Carboniferous and Upper Old Red Sandstone strata. The juxtaposition of different rock types has meant that individual breweries have always had access to differing sources of water. Even boreholes in close proximity could produce waters with vastly different analyses. Thus the Edinburgh brewers have always blended waters to produce their characteristically wide range of beers, from milds to bitters and beyond.
Modern commercial brewers aren't daft enough to want to match their water to historical water data; home brewers are, for some strange reason.steve_flack wrote:But how many commercial brewers would boil their water to remove carbonate now? Most would chemically remove the carbonate....which would leave the calcium present in most cases.
As far as I can see, your calculator could leave those people with very soft water with too little calcium after treatment as assuming a target of 0ppm for calcium would mean they wouldn't add any.