Brew Day Essentials
Brew Day Water Preparation
Water Is Your Canvas
Water makes up 90-95% of finished beer. Its mineral content affects mash pH, enzyme activity, hop perception, yeast health, and overall flavor. Adjusting your water is one of the highest-impact improvements a brewer can make.
Know Your Source Water
Start by obtaining a water report from your municipal supplier or sending a sample to a laboratory like Ward Laboratories. Key parameters to know:
- Calcium (Ca) — promotes enzyme activity, yeast health, and clarity
- Magnesium (Mg) — yeast nutrient in small amounts; harsh at high levels
- Sodium (Na) — rounds malt character; salty above 100 ppm
- Sulfate (SO4) — accentuates hop dryness and crispness
- Chloride (Cl) — enhances malt body and roundness
- Bicarbonate (HCO3) — buffers acidity; raises mash pH
Mash pH
The ideal mash pH is 5.2-5.6 (measured at room temperature). This range optimizes enzyme activity, improves conversion efficiency, and produces cleaner-tasting beer. Dark malts naturally lower pH; pale malts and high-bicarbonate water raise it.
Adjustments include adding food-grade lactic acid or phosphoric acid to lower pH, or adding calcium carbonate (chalk) or baking soda to raise it. Brewing software like Bru'n Water or Brewfather calculates additions precisely.
Classic Water Profiles
Pilsen — Very soft (low in all minerals). Produces the delicate, soft character of Bohemian lagers.
Burton-on-Trent — Extremely high sulfate (600+ ppm). Creates the dry, assertive hop character of English pale ales and IPAs.
Dublin — High bicarbonate. Supports the roasty character of Irish stouts by buffering the acidity of dark malts.
Munich — Moderate bicarbonate with balanced minerals. Suits malty lagers.
The Sulfate-to-Chloride Ratio
This ratio is a powerful tool for shaping beer balance:
- High sulfate, low chloride (3:1 or higher) — hop-forward, dry, crisp (IPA, pale ale)
- Balanced (1:1 to 2:1) — neutral balance (amber ale, lager)
- Low sulfate, high chloride (1:2 or lower) — malt-forward, round, full (stout, brown ale)
Making Additions
Common brewing salts include gypsum (calcium sulfate), calcium chloride, Epsom salt (magnesium sulfate), table salt (sodium chloride), and chalk (calcium carbonate). Add salts to the mash water before dough-in or dissolve them in the full boil volume.
Starting from Scratch
Many brewers start with RO (reverse osmosis) or distilled water and build up the mineral profile from zero. This provides a clean slate and eliminates variables from source water variation.
Practical Advice
Do not stress about water chemistry on your first few batches. Focus on sanitation, fermentation temperature, and recipe design first. When you are ready to take the next step, water adjustment will unlock a new level of precision and flavor control.