Belgian Ale Water Profile

Let your knowledge and questions of water flow!

Moderators: BlackDuck, Beer-lord, LouieMacGoo, philm00x, gwcr

Post Reply
User avatar
BlackDuck
Moderator
Moderator
Posts: 5156
Joined: Wed Aug 07, 2013 7:49 am
Location: Canal Winchester, Ohio

Belgian Ale Water Profile

Post by BlackDuck »

Next weekend I'm going to try to brew the Nashville Belgian Ale aka Four Kilts Clueless Belgian Specialty Ale that we came up with.

As for my water profile, would you guys/gals suggest that I use the Antwerp profile that is listed in the post Dawg LB Steve made or would there be a better option?
Ca+2 = 90
Mg+2 = 11
Na+ = 37
Cl- = 0
SO4-2 = 84
HC03 = 76

My malt bill will be:
9.25 pounds pilsner
3 lbs Vienna
12 ounces Special B
8 ounces Aromatic
8 ounces carapils
3 ounces smoked malt

:thanks:
ANTLER BREWING
Drinking
#93 - Gerst Amber Ale
Conditioning and Carbing

Fermenting

On Deck
User avatar
Inkleg
Brew Guru
Brew Guru
Posts: 4582
Joined: Sun Aug 11, 2013 5:44 pm
Location: Lilburn, GA

Re: Belgian Ale Water Profile

Post by Inkleg »

Uhm...........sure....... :huh:

But there again, I'm still a water nOOb.
Naked Cat Brewery On Tap
Yazoo Sue Smoked Porter
Octoberfest
Le Petite Saison
Czech Pale Lager
A Toast to Big Fuzzy Russian Imperial Stout at 10%
Belgian Blond
Flower Power IPA
4 Kilts Clueless Belgian Strong
One Wort Two Yeast with Wyeast 2206
One Wort Two Yeast with WLP940
Shipwreck Saison
User avatar
BlackDuck
Moderator
Moderator
Posts: 5156
Joined: Wed Aug 07, 2013 7:49 am
Location: Canal Winchester, Ohio

Re: Belgian Ale Water Profile

Post by BlackDuck »

So after some research on Belgian water profiles, I've decided to match as close as possible to the Chimay profile that is listed in Brew Like A Monk. That profile is:
CA+2 = 96
MG+2 = 4
NA+ = 6
CL- = 13
SO4-2 = 32

After my adjustments, which is basically starting from scratch with distilled water, adding back in 1/2 gallon of my tap water along with 1 gram each of Gypsum, Calcium Choloride and Epsom Salt, and also adding 5 grams of slaked lime, I get really close:
CA+2 = 84
MG+2 = 3
NA+ = 9
CL- = 15
SO4-2 = 33

We'll see how it turns out!!!
ANTLER BREWING
Drinking
#93 - Gerst Amber Ale
Conditioning and Carbing

Fermenting

On Deck
User avatar
Dawg LB Steve
Brew Guru
Brew Guru
Posts: 2778
Joined: Fri Feb 07, 2014 7:39 pm
Location: Greater Cleveland East

Re: Belgian Ale Water Profile

Post by Dawg LB Steve »

Can't get much closer to Belgian Style than Chimay! Nice research Chris!
:urock:
MONTUCKY BREWING
Currently brewing:

Next Up?
Kolsch?
Ginger Beer?
Traveling Red?
Yazoo Gerst Clone?
Peanut Butter Porter?

Currently Conditioning:
Cherry Mead
California Moscato

Currently enjoying:
Hardly Apple Cider on tap
Hardly Cherry Lime-Aid on tap
Oktoberfestive-Ale on tap
PGA Cider (Pear, Ginger, Apple) on tap 3rd Founders Cup 2016 King Of The Mountain on tap
Bottoms Up Brown on tap GOLD 2016 Ohio Brew Week Silver 2016 Ohio State Fair Silver 2016 Son of Brewzilla, Silver 2015 Son of Brewzilla, Bronze 2015 King Of The Mountain on tap
NITWIT BELGIAN STRONG ALE Banjo-Dawg RCE bottled
DAWG LB PALE ALE bottled
CITRA SLAPPED AMBER ALE bottle
MO FREEDOM SMaSH bottle
HOP TO IT IMPERIAL IPA bottle

Medal Count
Gold 3
Silver 5
Bronze 5
Actively brewing since December 2013
User avatar
derekscott85
Newbie
Newbie
Posts: 6
Joined: Mon Jan 05, 2015 5:00 am

Re: Belgian Ale Water Profile

Post by derekscott85 »

You should consider how Chimay treats their water. Just because their municipal profile is as listed doesn't mean they use it as is.

With that said, I believe Chimay does very little as far as water treatment is concerned.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
User avatar
mashani
mashani
mashani
Posts: 6741
Joined: Sat Aug 10, 2013 11:57 pm

Re: Belgian Ale Water Profile

Post by mashani »

The profiles in Bruin Water for Belgian regions are pretty accurate. Use the boiled profile if you know that the brewery boils/concentrates their water before use. That's about all the water treatment most of the traditional breweries do, from a historical perspective. I'd suggest to base the profile on the yeast choice you are using. As in wherever that brewery the yeast was sourced from, that yeast is was selected because it made great beer with that regional profile.

I'm lucky, like Big PapaG is, that water from the Eerie lake nearbye makes really good Belgians as is. So I don't bother with it for them.
Post Reply