Darren Waszkinel
Member
Hey all
I am a new brewer brewer (2 brews under my belt using the Brewzilla and Fermzilla). My latest brew is a Juicy bits clone.
I am at the end of fermentation and I can already see that the beer will not be as Hazy as the ones I have been enjoying.
I am chasing that super hazyness and thickness/body on the beer
My recipe for the NEIPA calls out
79.2% of Pale malt
7.4% of flaked oats
7.4% of flaked wheat
7.9% of Carapils
From what I have been reading, there are multiple factors that contribute to the haze like
- adjunct selection and the amount of
- hopping schedule and amount
- Yeast selection and how much it can keep stuff in suspension
I am all for experimenting but I wanted to ask all you fine people if you have nailed this type of super hazyness in a NEIPA and if you have any advice ?
I am thinking of bumping up the oats and wheats to 10% each and reducing the base malt but I would love to hear all of your feedback/advice on this topic
Thabkyou all
I am a new brewer brewer (2 brews under my belt using the Brewzilla and Fermzilla). My latest brew is a Juicy bits clone.
I am at the end of fermentation and I can already see that the beer will not be as Hazy as the ones I have been enjoying.
I am chasing that super hazyness and thickness/body on the beer
My recipe for the NEIPA calls out
79.2% of Pale malt
7.4% of flaked oats
7.4% of flaked wheat
7.9% of Carapils
From what I have been reading, there are multiple factors that contribute to the haze like
- adjunct selection and the amount of
- hopping schedule and amount
- Yeast selection and how much it can keep stuff in suspension
I am all for experimenting but I wanted to ask all you fine people if you have nailed this type of super hazyness in a NEIPA and if you have any advice ?
I am thinking of bumping up the oats and wheats to 10% each and reducing the base malt but I would love to hear all of your feedback/advice on this topic
Thabkyou all