Water: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 12:26, 14 March 2008

One of the four ingredients of beer. The only requirement for water used in brewing is that it be drinkable. Chemically speaking, brewing water should be non-alkaline and of a certain hardness, prerequisites easily attained with the proper treatment.

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Editor

The various fields in the water editor are used for the following purposes:
Name
self-explanatory
Description
comments on distinctive characteristics of the ingredient
Ca++
Calcium ppm
Mg++
Magnesium ppm
Na++
Sodium ppm
SO4--
Sulfate ppm
HCO3-
Bicarbonate ppm
Cl-
Chlorine ppm
Hardness
Water 'hardness' (including both Ca2+ and Mg2+ ions) is reported as ppm w/v (or mg/L) of CaCO3. Water hardness usually measures the total concentration of Ca and Mg, the two most prevalent divalent metal ions, although in some geographical locations iron, aluminium, and manganese may also be present at elevated levels.
Alkalinity
Alkalinity is a measure of the ability of a solution to neutralize acids to the equivalence points of carbonate or bicarbonate.
pH
pH is a measure of the acidity and the base of a solution in terms of activity of hydrogen (H+).
Cost/Unit
unit cost of the ingredient
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See also