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Old 03-12-2011, 03:20 PM   #1
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Default attempt and an ipa

i am attempting a half batch tomorrow of an ipa. so here is what i have so far, and if anyone has any input please let me know. and if this is not even an ipa, please let me know as well. this recipe's base started off as a chico style american ale. and i am basing my experiments around it.

.5lb 2 row
.25lb c60L
.25lb honey malt
.25lb aromatic malt

4lbs DME

hops:
warrior(17.2% aa)
amarillo (7.5% aa)
crystal(2.8% aa)
perle (6.5% aa)
cascade (5.0%aa)

yeast- safale us-05

irish moss at 15min

i will be steeping the grain for 45 min, then removing the bags and starting the boil, then adding the malt and rolling the boil.. at this point i will start the 60 min timer and add the hop additions. the hop additions are what i am still trying to firgure out. i would like to use the warrior as a bittering hops. but as a half batch, i have 1.0oz size bags of pellets of all the hops. so i was wondering which hops make good bittering and which ones will add to the flavor and aroma better. my chart says these hops are all good for both bittering and flavor, aroma. i would also like to dry hop this.

the original recipe calls for 5.0 gal at 1.059og, og 8.4 srm, 43 ibus, 5.9%abv. i have upped the malt extract quite a bit from the original and adding over twice the hops. so i know the numbers will all change as well. any input would be awesome. thanks


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Old 03-12-2011, 03:23 PM   #2
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oh. one more thing. what is a suggestion for the amount of water and exactly how to steep. i have been putting the bag in enough water to completely cover the gran bags and then some. and timing that at 45 min.. then when that is done. i just remove the bags and disgard. then i use that same pot for my boil. and add a little more water if it is too thick with the malt. because if the ratio of malt to water is too high, the water seems to expand too much during the boil, causeing an over flow. so this batch i am hoping to come out with about 2.5 to 3 gallons. so any suggestions on an exact steeping schedule and boil process would be awesome too.
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Old 03-12-2011, 03:27 PM   #3
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Sorry, I can't get past the title. SORRY! I am a card carrying ASS.

You are just brewing 1 beer right? The title looks like you are attempting....something, and making an ipa.

It looks good, how long are you boiling the hops? Be careful of the warrior. at 60 minutes? HOLY CRAP its bitter!!!

The boil "overflow" is supposed to happen. that is why you have to watch CLOSE.

Any brew boiled properly would overflow if not watched.
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Old 03-12-2011, 03:36 PM   #4
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im just brewing in small batched now to save money. i will be brewing every other week or so until i can get it how i like it. then ill go back to full batches. i have gotten extra fermentation buckets to allow for a more often process. and i was thinking of adding the warrior at the 60 min mark. would it make it less bitter if i added the warrior later and used the perle for the 60min?
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Old 03-12-2011, 04:15 PM   #5
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Let me step back, Warrior should ONLY be used if you want it BITTER AS HELL.

I didn;t like the aroma and flavor I got from warrior, so I would boil it 60 minutes if I were you.

Beyond that, the rest could all be late additions for lots of flavor and aroma, because, believe me, you will have bitterness already.
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Old 03-12-2011, 04:26 PM   #6
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as late additions do you mean 30-15-10-0 min additions? possibly dry hopped too?
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Old 03-12-2011, 05:03 PM   #7
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I once boiled over wort I was boiling for a starter. 1 gallon in a 4 gallon pot. I have boiled 4 gallons in a 5 gallon pot and not boiled that over. Watch the pot and it won't boil over, don't watch it and it WILL boil over.

My procedure for steeping is as follows.
1) I steep grains in a smaller pot at 1-3 quarts of water per pound.(not gallon) I usually steep a pound in half a gallon of water.
2)With 20 minutes left in the steep start heating water in the boil pot. This way you cut out 20 minutes of your brew day while you wait for water to boil. By far the biggest non-brewing time sink in my brew day is waiting for water to heat up.
3)At the end of the steep dip your grain bag in your heating boil water then pour in steep water. I no longer use grain bags but a SS strainer instead. I just dump the grains straight into the smaller pot. I pour the grains and water through the strainer into the boil pot. Then I use water from the boil pot to rinse the grains.
4)Brew as normal.

The SS strainer is good because it leaves one more thing I don't have to remember when buying supplies.

I think most people put their hop additions at 60m, 20-15m and around 5m-flameout. They avoid anything longer than 20 minutes because it will boil off most of the flavor and not add much bitterness so it is kind of a waste.
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Old 03-12-2011, 05:05 PM   #8
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kphipps06 View Post
as late additions do you mean 30-15-10-0 min additions? possibly dry hopped too?
I mean 10min-flameout (0) and dry hopped.

Quote:
Originally Posted by logan3825 View Post
I once boiled over wort I was boiling for a starter. 1 gallon in a 4 gallon pot. I have boiled 4 gallons in a 5 gallon pot and not boiled that over. Watch the pot and it won't boil over, don't watch it and it WILL boil over.

My procedure for steeping is as follows.
1) I steep grains in a smaller pot at 1-3 quarts of water per gallon. I usually steep a pound in half a gallon of water.
2)With 20 minutes left in the steep start heating water in the boil pot. This way you cut out 20 minutes of your brew day while you wait for water to boil. By far the biggest non-brewing time sink in my brew day is waiting for water to heat up.
3)At the end of the steep dip your grain bag in your heating boil water then pour in steep water. I no longer use grain bags but a SS strainer instead. I just dump the grains straight into the smaller pot. I pour the grains and water through the strainer into the boil pot. Then I use water from the boil pot to rinse the grains.
4)Brew as normal.

The SS strainer is good because it leaves one more thing I don't have to remember when buying supplies.
Thanks! I was feeling too lethargic for that much detail.

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Old 03-12-2011, 05:51 PM   #9
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thanks guys. and just to make sure i have to whole process down. if i steep a few quarts in one pot. (if im going for about a 2.5 gallon batch) what would be the proper ratio of water to boil with? and then i just top it off with fresh water after the cooling process but before the yeast pitch?
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Old 03-12-2011, 05:56 PM   #10
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You want to boil as much wort as you can, with as little top off as you can without boil over.

can you boil 2.5 gallons?

Boilovers usually occur right after hop additions or DME additions.


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