Dog fish head 90 min IPA

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Captain Kimbo

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Yesterday I tried for the first time Dog fish Head 90 min IPA. It was so different to what I thought it would be, I'm not sure if it was the batch I tried but it was unlike any IPA I had tried before. I was expecting a huge hop hit on the nose but instead there was the most amazing barley malt smell. The taste was sweet and totally dominated by the malt.

I'v had beers before like Sierra Nevada Southern Hemisphere IPA when the beer is hopped so much it taste like fruit juice and there's no malt to talk of.

Does anyone know if there is any crystal malt in the grain bill? because to me it tasted like it was 100% 2 row malted barley.

A friend had a bottle at the same time and really didn't like it, I guess because he was looking for the hops
 
The one I tried definitely had a shed load of hop flavour and aroma, but it is the depth of the malt bill I remember as well.
 
Can't comment, I have a bottle sitting in the fridge I bought at Plonk on the weekend....there has to be some positives to travelling to Canberra for the wife's cancer treatments.

Gonna crack it Wednesday or Thursday on days off, really looking forward to it.
 
Yeah I had a couple recently on an American cruise ship. First one had a nice balance of hops and malt. But the second one from a different bar and potentially different storage conditions had lost the hops aroma and tasted sweet like raisons and didn't show any signs of being hopped continuously for 90 minutes. At $13US a bottle (plus 15% tip) I was a bit miffed and asked for an Alaskan Pale Ale to replace it. At least I could taste the hops in that. I love the DFH60min but have yet to try the 75min and 120min.
 
Captain Kimbo said:
Yesterday I tried for the first time Dog fish Head 90 min IPA. It was so different to what I thought it would be, I'm not sure if it was the batch I tried but it was unlike any IPA I had tried before. I was expecting a huge hop hit on the nose but instead there was the most amazing barley malt smell. The taste was sweet and totally dominated by the malt.
Captain Kimbo, That beer is a big beer. First of all it falls into the BJCP class of Imperial IPA. So it is not really comparable to an IPA, except to expect it is bigger in every way. The Hop character that is not there I suspect is a result of age and transport. Hop character fades fast even in big beers. So I expect it may not have tasted in the hop sense at the brewery like it did in your bottle, not sure as I've never tasted it in the US. This is even noticeable in bottled Australian craft / hoppy beers, and these have not been freighted across the world, get an older one and the hop has gone.

I believe the beer is up around 90 IBU's so it would have a solid Malt backbone to support / balance that. But that doesn't mean it has any crystal malt. I suspect it has none or very little. Mainly a good base Malt and a little something for colour and flavour like an Amber Malt.

I wish I had one.
 
I've had it a few times both in bottle and on tap at various places in the US. As mentioned above, it's a DIPA so expect it to be higher in ABV and in the "sweetness".

I don't remember it being particularly cloyey though. When is the next time you can taste the real deal?
 
roastin said:
At least I could taste the hops in that. I love the DFH60min but have yet to try the 75min and 120min.
. I have had a fair few of the 90s luckily relatively fresh and there is a massive hop flavour. A related topic the 75 for me is the best ..
ImageUploadedByAussie Home Brewer1423489006.202526.jpg
 
Brewman_ said:
Captain Kimbo, That beer is a big beer. First of all it falls into the BJCP class of Imperial IPA. So it is not really comparable to an IPA, except to expect it is bigger in every way. The Hop character that is not there I suspect is a result of age and transport. Hop character fades fast even in big beers. So I expect it may not have tasted in the hop sense at the brewery like it did in your bottle, not sure as I've never tasted it in the US. This is even noticeable in bottled Australian craft / hoppy beers, and these have not been freighted across the world, get an older one and the hop has gone.

I believe the beer is up around 90 IBU's so it would have a solid Malt backbone to support / balance that. But that doesn't mean it has any crystal malt. I suspect it has none or very little. Mainly a good base Malt and a little something for colour and flavour like an Amber Malt.

I wish I had one.
Is there any evidence to suggest the ABV itself has a positive or negative effect on the longevity of hop character?
Probably no surprises here, but of a recent batch of hoppy (ish) APA I bottled, some stayed on the shelf, some I crammed into the keezer as soon as they carbed up. Even after a month, the hop aroma on the cold stored bottles shone much brighter than the bottles stored at ambient temps.
Just sayin.
 
Dave70 said:
Is there any evidence to suggest the ABV itself has a positive or negative effect on the longevity of hop character?
Probably no surprises here, but of a recent batch of hoppy (ish) APA I bottled, some stayed on the shelf, some I crammed into the keezer as soon as they carbed up. Even after a month, the hop aroma on the cold stored bottles shone much brighter than the bottles stored at ambient temps.
Just sayin.
That would be why Stone insist on cold storage all the way from Brewery to retailer, especially for overseas sales.
 
For about a week or late last year South Side Tea Room in Brisbane had a carton of these they were selling for $7 each! But it wasn't advertised so I may or may not have had the lions share of them.
 
Dave70 said:
Is there any evidence to suggest the ABV itself has a positive or negative effect on the longevity of hop character?
Probably no surprises here, but of a recent batch of hoppy (ish) APA I bottled, some stayed on the shelf, some I crammed into the keezer as soon as they carbed up. Even after a month, the hop aroma on the cold stored bottles shone much brighter than the bottles stored at ambient temps.
Just sayin.
Dave70,
I am not sure about the ABV on Hop aroma / flavour retention.

As you expected the cold storage seems to preserve some of those more delicate flavours and aromas that make good beers great.
 
roastin said:
Yeah I had a couple recently on an American cruise ship. First one had a nice balance of hops and malt. But the second one from a different bar and potentially different storage conditions had lost the hops aroma and tasted sweet like raisons and didn't show any signs of being hopped continuously for 90 minutes. At $13US a bottle (plus 15% tip) I was a bit miffed and asked for an Alaskan Pale Ale to replace it. At least I could taste the hops in that. I love the DFH60min but have yet to try the 75min and 120min.
DFH 120 is like being slapped around the head with a massive malt bill followed by the dryness of a dextrose adjunct beer, before having a beautifully aromatic blend of hops jammed into your mouth like fluffy bunnies.

Its a great experience, and its a beautiful drop. But its super intense.
 
Not all American IPAs are truly the same style. Most of the IPAs we have been weened on are West Coast IPAs that are very much hop forward, bitter and dry. So when you describe a west coast ipa as being balanced... well they really aren't . East Coast IPAs, such as DFH's offering are more of a hybrid between English IPAs that include a lot of specialty malts and the familiar west coast IPAs, that obviously like a liberal dose of new world hops. It's the perfect marriage of malt sweetness and bitter hops that make for a more rounded and complex (some might say balanced) beer.
 
You've got the east / west coast styles backwards there but you're totally right about the 90min being the maltier (west coast) style, unlike the 60min which is drier and less malty.
 
Au contraire my friend I think you might have East/West mixed up. Google it bro. West is dry, East is malty.
 
Phoney said:
I've had it a few times both in bottle and on tap at various places in the US. As mentioned above, it's a DIPA so expect it to be higher in ABV and in the "sweetness".

I don't remember it being particularly cloyey though. When is the next time you can taste the real deal?
Hopefully sooner than later, as far as I'm aware there's only really 1 bottleshop in Perth that has it and even then it's rare I think it was $10 per 330ml bottle. I'd like to try it in the US. I can see I'll need to plan a trip to the States with visits to the Alchemist, Russian River, Dogfishhead & probably Anchor.....
 

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