Fermented
I have the body of a god: Buddha.
- Joined
- 6/10/08
- Messages
- 606
- Reaction score
- 1
Hello!
I've had quite a few James Squire IPA lately and rather like it, so was hoping to clone it. I've read a few recipes, but as a n00b am still trying to get my head around what does what, why and how as I am still searching for good references for the maths behind it, let alone understanding it. Yes, I would like to be a technical brewer initially and yes, I realise that there is art as well as tech in making a nice drop.
I was thinking to make the clone from:
* Coopers IPA kit
* 250 g maltodextrine
* 500 g dextrose
* 250 g dry pale malt extract
* Safale S-04 yeast
* 23 litres.
However, after reading a lot more, I think that this will give too low an OG and may not produce enough flavour and aroma. I understand that IPAs have a 1060-1070+ OG and about a 1010-1015 FG. Is this correct?
Would it be better if I added a Coopers LME to it as well? The above recipe seems to rely too much on non-malt sugars and would perhaps make a less flavoursome result than something that is malt driven.
Or ditch the adjuncts listed above and throw in 2 x Coopers LME and maybe 12 g EKG steeped for 15 minutes? Or 12 g steeped and 12 g dry hopped halfway through the primary?
I've chosen the S-04 as it flocs rather well and will cope with the warmer temps that are expected here next week. The FV sits in a place that is 22-23C when the ambient is 26-32C. Yep - I nerded it out with a data logging DMM and a K-type thermocouple.
I'm trying to find that balance between maltiness and hoppiness (sp?) that makes IPA special without making a beer that is too chewy, over-bodied or over-hopped.
If anyone could steer me in the right direction on this one, I would be most appreciative.
Cheers - Fermented.
I've had quite a few James Squire IPA lately and rather like it, so was hoping to clone it. I've read a few recipes, but as a n00b am still trying to get my head around what does what, why and how as I am still searching for good references for the maths behind it, let alone understanding it. Yes, I would like to be a technical brewer initially and yes, I realise that there is art as well as tech in making a nice drop.
I was thinking to make the clone from:
* Coopers IPA kit
* 250 g maltodextrine
* 500 g dextrose
* 250 g dry pale malt extract
* Safale S-04 yeast
* 23 litres.
However, after reading a lot more, I think that this will give too low an OG and may not produce enough flavour and aroma. I understand that IPAs have a 1060-1070+ OG and about a 1010-1015 FG. Is this correct?
Would it be better if I added a Coopers LME to it as well? The above recipe seems to rely too much on non-malt sugars and would perhaps make a less flavoursome result than something that is malt driven.
Or ditch the adjuncts listed above and throw in 2 x Coopers LME and maybe 12 g EKG steeped for 15 minutes? Or 12 g steeped and 12 g dry hopped halfway through the primary?
I've chosen the S-04 as it flocs rather well and will cope with the warmer temps that are expected here next week. The FV sits in a place that is 22-23C when the ambient is 26-32C. Yep - I nerded it out with a data logging DMM and a K-type thermocouple.
I'm trying to find that balance between maltiness and hoppiness (sp?) that makes IPA special without making a beer that is too chewy, over-bodied or over-hopped.
If anyone could steer me in the right direction on this one, I would be most appreciative.
Cheers - Fermented.