This has probably been covered, so apologies for going over old ground.
When it comes to dry-hopping, information is scattered and inconsistent. So I want to get a view on what others do - mainly to see if what I am doing is wrong. Here's what I do:
Time
I generally like to give my beer 2 weeks in the FV, I think I read on here that it give time for the yeast to clean up after itself. In any case, the beer turns out OK so this is what I do. So From the two week mark, I work backwards usually 3-4 days from bottling.
Amount
Usually about 50 grams per 20 litre brew. So about 2.5 grams per litre. Although this depends on the style of beer and what I am after.
Method
I put them in a santized stocking which I sink with whisky stones (little blocks of marble). This isn't super effective at sinking, the bag floats to the top once it has taken on liquid, but for the moment it is what I do.
I used to commando, never again. It wasn't worth the headache, my bottle filling wand constantly got blocked; the hop matter ended up in my bottles and this created a really terrible situation where every time I would open a beer, it would gush and I would lose half. And the hop aroma / flavour continued to intensify. (no, I didn't cold crash - I haven't got the space for that kind of set up. And no, the gushing was not due to infection, the beer was very drinkable albeit with an ever increasing hop profile).
So questions:
When it comes to dry-hopping, information is scattered and inconsistent. So I want to get a view on what others do - mainly to see if what I am doing is wrong. Here's what I do:
Time
I generally like to give my beer 2 weeks in the FV, I think I read on here that it give time for the yeast to clean up after itself. In any case, the beer turns out OK so this is what I do. So From the two week mark, I work backwards usually 3-4 days from bottling.
Amount
Usually about 50 grams per 20 litre brew. So about 2.5 grams per litre. Although this depends on the style of beer and what I am after.
Method
I put them in a santized stocking which I sink with whisky stones (little blocks of marble). This isn't super effective at sinking, the bag floats to the top once it has taken on liquid, but for the moment it is what I do.
I used to commando, never again. It wasn't worth the headache, my bottle filling wand constantly got blocked; the hop matter ended up in my bottles and this created a really terrible situation where every time I would open a beer, it would gush and I would lose half. And the hop aroma / flavour continued to intensify. (no, I didn't cold crash - I haven't got the space for that kind of set up. And no, the gushing was not due to infection, the beer was very drinkable albeit with an ever increasing hop profile).
So questions:
- The above process works for me, but I wonder if there are ways I can improve it
- I've read people like to put the hops in while the yeast is still a little active. What is the benefit of this? If hopping with something that is renowned for "grassyness" then does that mean the 2 week in fermentor rule should be changed to accomodate?
- What about pre-pitching dry hopping? Is that a waste of hops due to the C02, or the secret step I am lacking?
- What do others do?