Hez
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 9/6/17
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I've tried making a very hoppy IPA three times with more or less the same result. All of them had been good drinkable beers, the second better than the first and the third better than the second, but all of them had the same problems:
- too fruity (<- high fermentation temp)
- very noticeable alcohol
- not hoppy enough
I've come a long way since the first one: I've improved my mashing insulation, sparge technique, temperature measurement, chilling procedure, I bought a bigger kettle and started to take control of the water (minerals and ph), but still there was something very important I was missing, the fermentation temperature control.
I used the wet tshirt method (http://beerandwinejournal.com/wet-t-shirt-cooling/) and I got pretty decent (other styles) beers, but I think it's not enough control enough for making a crisp ale with in-your-face hoppyness.
Now I can cold crash and get rid of the hop shocks for dry hopping -> more contact of the hops with the beer -> more hoppyness!
I found a good second hand bar fridge AT LAST! and I bought the Inkbird ITC-308 dual temperature controller, so when it arrives (and my last beer, the saison, is ready to drink) I want to try a different approach.
With the moroccan heat of a sunny-Sydney-summer (https://www.antipodesmap.com/), you don't want a very alcoholic strong beer, you want a crisp, refreshing beer like an American Pale Ale.
@see proto-recipe below
I have Citra (I want to finish it) and I think Amarillo would be a good combination, or would you use Cascade instead? or other one? What do you think of the "hop-schedule"? I don't want it too bitter but I want to feel like I'm chewing weed when I drink it. Full American experience
Silly question: how do you feel about squeezing (sanitized hands ) the hop shocks when removing them from the kettle?
I've drunk a couple of hoppy beers with some wheat into them (Fred's IPA is one of my favourite beers right now) and I like the extra body and head retention. Do you think 5% is too much? too little to notice? maybe 7.5% better?
I've seen many recipes including Vienna and Biscuit malts, but I don't know...
About the water adjustments, the idea is: Medium Cl and SO4 but ratio still below .77 (enhance bitterness), slightly high Ca and intermediate-to-low pH. Sounds good?
I'm very interested about the fermentation temp, obviously! <- new fridge!
With US-05: Pitch @20º, ferment @18º, dry hop @20º? what do you think?
Here is the proto-recipe:
P.S. I forgot to say this is for a 10L BATCH or half batch.
GRAIN:
90% Pale 2Row
5% Crystal 54L
5% Wheat Malt
OG 1055
FG 1013
ABV ~5.5%
MASH:
65ºC 90' <- not too high, I don't want a sweet beer
76ºC 10'
Sparge @76ºC
HOPS:
60' 3g Citra 12.8%AA -> 9.15IBU
60' 3g Amarillo 9.5%AA -> 6.79IBU
15' 5g Citra 12.8%AA -> 7.77IBU
15' 5g Amarillo 9.5%AA -> 5.62IBU
5' 12g Citra 12.8%AA -> 7.30IBU
5' 12g Amarillo 9.5%AA -> 5.42IBU
0' 20g Citra 12.8%AA -> 2.63IBU (steep 30' @80º then remove and chill)
0' 25g Amarillo 9.5%AA -> 2.44IBU (steep 30' @80º then remove and chill)
TOTAL IBU 47.12
DRY HOP 30g Citra 12.8%AA for 6 days (without hop-shock)
DRY HOP 55g Amarillo 9.5%AA for 6 days (without hop-shock)
WATER ADJUSTMENTS:
Use Gypsum/Calcium Sulphate/CaSO4 , Calcium Chloride CaCl2 and Lactic Acid 88% to:
Ca: 133 <- Palmer's recommended range 50-150
Mg: 23 <- Palmer's recommended range 10-30
Na: 16 <- Palmer's recommended range 0-150
Cl: 124 <- Palmer's recommended range 0-250
SO4: 171 <- Palmer's recommended range 50-350
Cl to SO4 Ratio: 0.73 <- Below .77, May enhance bitterness
Estimated pH (room temp): 5.4 <- Palmer's recommended range 5.4-5.6
YEAST:
Safale US-05
Pitch @20ºC
5 days @18ºC
Dry Hop @20ºC for 6 days (without hop-shock)
Cold crash 24h (the coldest the fermentation bar fridge reach)
CARBONATION:
2.8Vol CO2 <- insult me and call me whatever you like... I like carbonation, specially in summer!
0.33L, 20ºC, 2.6g
ARTICLES/INFO:
https://ychhops.com/varieties/citra-brand-hbc-394-cv
Citra: grapefruit, melon, lime, gooseberry, passion fruit and lychee.
https://ychhops.com/varieties/amarillo-brand-vgxp01
Amarillo: grapefruit, orange, lemon, melon, apricot and peach.
https://byo.com/bock/item/1759-american-pale-ale-style-profile
American Pale Ale: Style Profile
https://byo.com/body/item/1197-oh-say-can-you-c
Oh, Say Can You "C"?: A Guide to Brewing Hoppy American Pale Ales
https://byo.com/hops/item/133-american-pale-ale
American Pale Ale
Thanks in advance.
- too fruity (<- high fermentation temp)
- very noticeable alcohol
- not hoppy enough
I've come a long way since the first one: I've improved my mashing insulation, sparge technique, temperature measurement, chilling procedure, I bought a bigger kettle and started to take control of the water (minerals and ph), but still there was something very important I was missing, the fermentation temperature control.
I used the wet tshirt method (http://beerandwinejournal.com/wet-t-shirt-cooling/) and I got pretty decent (other styles) beers, but I think it's not enough control enough for making a crisp ale with in-your-face hoppyness.
Now I can cold crash and get rid of the hop shocks for dry hopping -> more contact of the hops with the beer -> more hoppyness!
I found a good second hand bar fridge AT LAST! and I bought the Inkbird ITC-308 dual temperature controller, so when it arrives (and my last beer, the saison, is ready to drink) I want to try a different approach.
With the moroccan heat of a sunny-Sydney-summer (https://www.antipodesmap.com/), you don't want a very alcoholic strong beer, you want a crisp, refreshing beer like an American Pale Ale.
@see proto-recipe below
I have Citra (I want to finish it) and I think Amarillo would be a good combination, or would you use Cascade instead? or other one? What do you think of the "hop-schedule"? I don't want it too bitter but I want to feel like I'm chewing weed when I drink it. Full American experience
Silly question: how do you feel about squeezing (sanitized hands ) the hop shocks when removing them from the kettle?
I've drunk a couple of hoppy beers with some wheat into them (Fred's IPA is one of my favourite beers right now) and I like the extra body and head retention. Do you think 5% is too much? too little to notice? maybe 7.5% better?
I've seen many recipes including Vienna and Biscuit malts, but I don't know...
About the water adjustments, the idea is: Medium Cl and SO4 but ratio still below .77 (enhance bitterness), slightly high Ca and intermediate-to-low pH. Sounds good?
I'm very interested about the fermentation temp, obviously! <- new fridge!
With US-05: Pitch @20º, ferment @18º, dry hop @20º? what do you think?
Here is the proto-recipe:
P.S. I forgot to say this is for a 10L BATCH or half batch.
GRAIN:
90% Pale 2Row
5% Crystal 54L
5% Wheat Malt
OG 1055
FG 1013
ABV ~5.5%
MASH:
65ºC 90' <- not too high, I don't want a sweet beer
76ºC 10'
Sparge @76ºC
HOPS:
60' 3g Citra 12.8%AA -> 9.15IBU
60' 3g Amarillo 9.5%AA -> 6.79IBU
15' 5g Citra 12.8%AA -> 7.77IBU
15' 5g Amarillo 9.5%AA -> 5.62IBU
5' 12g Citra 12.8%AA -> 7.30IBU
5' 12g Amarillo 9.5%AA -> 5.42IBU
0' 20g Citra 12.8%AA -> 2.63IBU (steep 30' @80º then remove and chill)
0' 25g Amarillo 9.5%AA -> 2.44IBU (steep 30' @80º then remove and chill)
TOTAL IBU 47.12
DRY HOP 30g Citra 12.8%AA for 6 days (without hop-shock)
DRY HOP 55g Amarillo 9.5%AA for 6 days (without hop-shock)
WATER ADJUSTMENTS:
Use Gypsum/Calcium Sulphate/CaSO4 , Calcium Chloride CaCl2 and Lactic Acid 88% to:
Ca: 133 <- Palmer's recommended range 50-150
Mg: 23 <- Palmer's recommended range 10-30
Na: 16 <- Palmer's recommended range 0-150
Cl: 124 <- Palmer's recommended range 0-250
SO4: 171 <- Palmer's recommended range 50-350
Cl to SO4 Ratio: 0.73 <- Below .77, May enhance bitterness
Estimated pH (room temp): 5.4 <- Palmer's recommended range 5.4-5.6
YEAST:
Safale US-05
Pitch @20ºC
5 days @18ºC
Dry Hop @20ºC for 6 days (without hop-shock)
Cold crash 24h (the coldest the fermentation bar fridge reach)
CARBONATION:
2.8Vol CO2 <- insult me and call me whatever you like... I like carbonation, specially in summer!
0.33L, 20ºC, 2.6g
ARTICLES/INFO:
https://ychhops.com/varieties/citra-brand-hbc-394-cv
Citra: grapefruit, melon, lime, gooseberry, passion fruit and lychee.
https://ychhops.com/varieties/amarillo-brand-vgxp01
Amarillo: grapefruit, orange, lemon, melon, apricot and peach.
https://byo.com/bock/item/1759-american-pale-ale-style-profile
American Pale Ale: Style Profile
https://byo.com/body/item/1197-oh-say-can-you-c
Oh, Say Can You "C"?: A Guide to Brewing Hoppy American Pale Ales
https://byo.com/hops/item/133-american-pale-ale
American Pale Ale
Thanks in advance.
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