Temperature is also a factor, and as I've just found out, the base beer might be as well. I dry hopped a 4.2% APA for 14 days at 4°C with 1.5g/L each of Cascade & Simcoe, and it was fantastic! Similar results for the last couple of American Wheats - about 2g/L total at at 4°C for 1-2 weeks. However, I've just done a 4.8% American Brown ale with 1g/L each Cascade & Simcoe for 10 days at 4°C, and while it smells and tastes good up front, the flavour quickly gives way to grassNick JD said:People often talk of g/L with dry hopping ... I've found g/L/day is the measurement that's important. Eg. 5g/L/0.5 days of a grassy hop works. 1g/L/5 days doesn't. Time, is a forgotten factor in many a dry hopper's regime.
Haven't tried a centennial dry hop, my last was a Cascade/Willamette mix @ 40g per 22L for and American Brown for four days in the keg with hop bag at fermentation temp before pulling the bag and crash chilling and it turned out great. I'd leave it, let it age a little and see how it turns out. I wouldn't panic.paulmclaren11 said:I keg hopped for the first time my keg as planned but have done it from day one - put them in yesterday. 20g of Centennial. I haven't used a lot of this hop and the majority of my late hop bill is Centennial @15 and 5 and bittered with Magnum.
Only just over 24 hours and the hop aroma and flavour is sooo pungent! I am not sure I like it....
Perhaps should have gone Citra or Amarillo.
Considering pulling them out already and hoping things mellow down.
Am I panicking on my first attempt or do the flavours improve with a couple more days? I am thinking if I don't like it now, it's only going to get worse!
Thoughts?
Haven't tried a cold dry hop, but there are people that like a cold over a fermentation temp dry hop. I prefer a 4 day schedule after doing a bit of research and the results where great after a week or two of aging. I transfer to secondary (keg) to get the wort off the yeast cake only if i'm dry hopping. I'm about to attempt an Imperial IPA with multiple dry hop additions so the schedule with change from 4 days to 10 or so, should be an interesting experiment......paulmclaren11 said:I am hopping it at serving temps... some reading suggested it would actually take longer for the keg hop to benefit.
Might wait until tomorrow night which is just over 48 hours and pull it. As you say over time it will mellow with age.
Perhaps I just don't like Centennial all that much.
Time to going fishing...... :blink: I tie my hop bag off with dental floss to one of the posts and seal the corny. Works a treat.paulmclaren11 said:and the hop sock has sunk......
paulmclaren11 said:I agree about the IBU's, it may just be percieved but my tastes of my APA with only 24 hours keg hop time seems waay more bitter.
In hindsight my beer tasted good @ FG without the dry hopping so should have just gone with that.
Might just stick to dry hopping in primary as per my usual routine.