SanPancho
Member
so im hoping to get some insight into the "pacific ale" and lager styles you guys have been seeing and enjoying. i'm in California, and have been hearing things about them, but obviously its not something we get here in the states so impossible for me to get samples to actually taste for myself. and alot of internet writeups always refer to an actual beer you guys get as a reference, which obviously doesnt help me at all...
the general themes i pick up are these-
moderate alcohol- no 7-8-9% bombs here, much more friendly 4-5ish % beers mean you can have more than one without falling off your stool
wheat- i always see it, but seems to vary from lowish amounts like 10-20ish, but others go up to like 40 or 50%
low IBUs- great idea, nothing i hate more than a beer that makes me thirsty.....
fruity hops- appeal is obvious.
water- no idea, but im told most of you guys seem to have fairly soft water...?
yeast- doesnt seem to be any particular variety or family of yeasts here, just a whatever-works situation?
so the alcohol is easy to understand, these should be like "session" beers. easy drinking, have a few all afternoon without getting stupid
wheat-given the varying amounts, im not quite clear if the goal is to be something that makes the beer light in body (low %), or if its to help pick up a creamy/smooth character like you see in hazy/neipa styles with higher %? are any other grains used like oats or spelt?
low ibus- obvious appeal. are we avoiding bittering additions and just getting ibus from late hops/whirlpool like a hazy/neipa recipe?
fruity hops- obvious appeal.
water- are there guidlines here? i assume sulfate is low to keep bitterness in check. are we upping chlorides? or just trying to stay very soft overall profile?
yeast- i dont seem to hear alot about ester profiles, seems like clean strains are popular.
the idea of these beers is like nirvana to me. now that i'm out of the commercial game, i get to brew for myself. and if i could snap my fingers and have any beer in front of me that i wanted, it would be a light crisp lager that was filled with the hop flavor. but more like you'd see in a west coast ipa- bright and clean. not the muddled, swamped, rotten fruit hop character so common in hazy/neipas.
so that's my new focus.
since so many awesome new hops are coming from AUS and NZ i think i'd like to understand how you folks are making them approachable and enjoyable.
the general themes i pick up are these-
moderate alcohol- no 7-8-9% bombs here, much more friendly 4-5ish % beers mean you can have more than one without falling off your stool
wheat- i always see it, but seems to vary from lowish amounts like 10-20ish, but others go up to like 40 or 50%
low IBUs- great idea, nothing i hate more than a beer that makes me thirsty.....
fruity hops- appeal is obvious.
water- no idea, but im told most of you guys seem to have fairly soft water...?
yeast- doesnt seem to be any particular variety or family of yeasts here, just a whatever-works situation?
so the alcohol is easy to understand, these should be like "session" beers. easy drinking, have a few all afternoon without getting stupid
wheat-given the varying amounts, im not quite clear if the goal is to be something that makes the beer light in body (low %), or if its to help pick up a creamy/smooth character like you see in hazy/neipa styles with higher %? are any other grains used like oats or spelt?
low ibus- obvious appeal. are we avoiding bittering additions and just getting ibus from late hops/whirlpool like a hazy/neipa recipe?
fruity hops- obvious appeal.
water- are there guidlines here? i assume sulfate is low to keep bitterness in check. are we upping chlorides? or just trying to stay very soft overall profile?
yeast- i dont seem to hear alot about ester profiles, seems like clean strains are popular.
the idea of these beers is like nirvana to me. now that i'm out of the commercial game, i get to brew for myself. and if i could snap my fingers and have any beer in front of me that i wanted, it would be a light crisp lager that was filled with the hop flavor. but more like you'd see in a west coast ipa- bright and clean. not the muddled, swamped, rotten fruit hop character so common in hazy/neipas.
so that's my new focus.
since so many awesome new hops are coming from AUS and NZ i think i'd like to understand how you folks are making them approachable and enjoyable.