Homebrewing has ruined me of commercial IPAs

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adamjackson

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It seems these days, the only IPAs I care to buy are local Vermont beers like Heady and Hill Farmstead. Any IPA that's nation-wide at my local beer store simply doesn't match my homebrew. I'm a terrible homebrew but I keg so usually I'm drinking an IPA 14 days after brewing it...it is just the freshness that makes my homebrew my favorite go to IPA? Or is it something else?

Am I alone in this one?
 
It seems these days, the only IPAs I care to buy are local Vermont beers like Heady and Hill Farmstead. Any IPA that's nation-wide at my local beer store simply doesn't match my homebrew. I'm a terrible homebrew but I keg so usually I'm drinking an IPA 14 days after brewing it...it is just the freshness that makes my homebrew my favorite go to IPA? Or is it something else?

Am I alone in this one?

You know, I still love commercial IPAs but Bob has become a hophead over the last few years and really doesn't love commercial IPAs anymore!

I asked him why, and he said there are three reasons. He said, first, "afteraffects". He said he often gets a headache from 3-4 commercial beers, but never from homebrew. He also said that he doesn't like the super-bitter IPAs, so mine are less bitter for our tastes. The last thing he said was he loved the super-fresh "in your face" hopping with a nice young fresh IPA on tap at our house.

It's true that most beers are on tap at about day 14 at our house, unless I've done a dryhop at day 12 and then it's day 17 or so. And then sometimes, I also dryhop in the keg. It makes for a big hop flavor and aroma, which we love.
 
Grain to glass in 14 days is fast or an IPA!

Anyhow - as a homebrewer, you're not nearly as limited by what you can do with hops. I imagine that imparts a degree of separation. Many breweries get caught in the IBU arms race. I believe this is a derivative of cost (hops, esp dry hops!) and consumers not understanding where hop aroma and flavor come from.
 
I prefer mine and my friends' brews over most of their commercial counterparts regardless of style. Especially IPAs. It's definitely freshness. I live about an hour from Founders and Bells. I love their IPAs. Even they start to lose that fresh hop flavor when they have been on the shelf for a while. You're lucky to have two really nice breweries to choose from
 
It is? Not at my house!

To let the beer condition/dry hop/drop clear and fully carb - 14 days is faster than I can do it. I haven't brewed nearly as many batches as you though. My beers always seem to taste better with a little more time. Especially when dry hopping in the keg.
 
To let the beer condition/dry hop/drop clear and fully carb - 14 days is faster than I can do it. I haven't brewed nearly as many batches as you though. My beers always seem to taste better with a little more time. Especially when dry hopping in the keg.

Ah. Well, I use pretty flocculant yeast when I can (WlP001 has been pretty good for me), but sometimes I use Denny's Favorite 50 when I want a strong malt presence too, and it takes forever to floc out! But normally, the beers are done by about day 5, pretty clear by day 8-9, dryhopped for 5 days and then kegged. If I add more hops to the keg, it takes a while for that aroma to "work", since it's at fridge temps but normally the aroma is just fine.

I think pitching a healthy yeast starter, having the OG in the 60s, using whirlfloc in the kettle, and kegging clear beer means having mine ready really early.
 
Depends on the brewery and how it's travelled.

I live in the UK and have had some American IPAs that have travelled really well; still nice and fresh. I've also had IPAs from local breweries that are incredibly bland.

Then there's my homebrew which I really enjoy; although as I don't (well, didn't) have any way of purging vessels I do tend to pick up a little oxygen and they do degrade more quickly than commercial examples. However, they don't usually last long enough for that to happen.
 
adamjackson said:
It seems these days, the only IPAs I care to buy are local Vermont beers like Heady and Hill Farmstead. Any IPA that's nation-wide at my local beer store simply doesn't match my homebrew. I'm a terrible homebrew but I keg so usually I'm drinking an IPA 14 days after brewing it...it is just the freshness that makes my homebrew my favorite go to IPA? Or is it something else?

Am I alone in this one?

Yea well there aren't many IPAs ion the world don't measure up to Heady or Hill Farm so I don't blame you for being that way. Not everyone has that access.
 
You may be in th range of Ithaca brewing co. and their Flower Power IPA.

Of course the fresher the better but this stuff will not disappoint. Huge aroma, huge flavor, a little malt and not all that bitter. Just a wonderful beer.

I do not have the experience in beer as many others on here do but this is absolutely one of my top three even after brewing my own.
 
It's usually 7 days to finish fermentation and then I'll do 7 days or more for dry hopping.

I think it's just freshness combined with the fact that IPAs are easy. My attempts at a stout or hefeweizen or barleywine don't compare to commercial beers. commericial beers are great but for IPAs, mine beat commercial in cost, availability and freshness. I figured a lot of homebrewers shared that feeling.
 
I have noticed this happening to me. My feelings towards commercial IPAs have become so much more divided. I either really like something, like Heady Topper, or just hate it. I get angry that I waste money. Freshness of my homebrew puts a lot of breweries at a disadvantage. I think its just one of those styles where freshness can outshine an otherwise superior recipe or brewery.
 
Yooper said:
You know, I still love commercial IPAs but Bob has become a hophead over the last few years and really doesn't love commercial IPAs anymore!

I asked him why, and he said there are three reasons. He said, first, "afteraffects". He said he often gets a headache from 3-4 commercial beers, but never from homebrew. He also said that he doesn't like the super-bitter IPAs, so mine are less bitter for our tastes. The last thing he said was he loved the super-fresh "in your face" hopping with a nice young fresh IPA on tap at our house.

It's true that most beers are on tap at about day 14 at our house, unless I've done a dryhop at day 12 and then it's day 17 or so. And then sometimes, I also dryhop in the keg. It makes for a big hop flavor and aroma, which we love.

Yooper, when you dry hop in your keg, do you leave your hop bags in once you begin serving, or do you pull them once you chill the beer?
 
Interesting since of course the original ipas travelled for months in ships
 
Interesting since of course the original ipas travelled for months in ships


I don't agree with the logic though.

Maybe I should preface from now on with "American IPAs" If we're going to get technical, then all IPAs should be aged in Oak casks for 3 months and ONLY use hops grown in Europe or the UK? Maybe they should be 4% and no higher?

The IPA has evolved immensely in the last 100 years. These days 80+ IBUs is normal, 6-10% ABV is normal and IPAs are consumed insanely fresh and fermented on stainless...that's the normal .
 
Yooper, when you dry hop in your keg, do you leave your hop bags in once you begin serving, or do you pull them once you chill the beer?

I almost always leave them in there for the life of the keg. My kegerator is at 40 degrees, and I've never had a problem at all with that. I don't generally keep an IPA keg at room temperature, but I did once. I dryhopped in the keg at room temperature for 5 days, then put the keg in the kegerator. I'm drinking it now, about 10 days later (literally, right now!) and it's great.
 
Actually American hops were used extensively in those ipas.. And they weren't 'oak aged' since the barrels were lined with brewers pitch. And they were predominantly in excess of 6% and very highly hopped.. Shows what you know! But I never said anything about what people should or shouldn't do, just pointed out that it's interesting how it has flipped round like that so chill the fu*k out
 
Actually American hops were used extensively in those ipas.. And they weren't 'oak aged' since the barrels were lined with brewers pitch. And they were predominantly in excess of 6%.. Shows what you know! But I never said anything about what people should or shouldn't do, just pointed out that it's interesting how it has flipped round like that so chill the fu*k out

Well, you are wrong. You should read up on the subject before becoming an expert.

And unfortunately, since you used an obscenity and insulted another forum member, you will be having a "time out" from our forum.
 
Well, you are wrong. You should read up on the subject before becoming an expert.

And unfortunately, since you used an obscenity and insulted another forum member, you will be having a "time out" from our forum.



Actually American hops were used extensively in those ipas.. And they weren't 'oak aged' since the barrels were lined with brewers pitch. And they were predominantly in excess of 6% and very highly hopped.. Shows what you know! But I never said anything about what people should or shouldn't do, just pointed out that it's interesting how it has flipped round like that so chill the fu*k out



thanks Yooper. To Padalac, sorry to upset you. Wikipedia which is far from perfect has some great info on the topic - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/India_Pale_Ale.

4% or less is key for the English version of the IPA.

Also, the English IPA on BJCP is great and it shows just below the American IPA. Both are very different -http://www.bjcp.org/styles04/Category14.php
 
adamjackson said:
thanks Yooper. To Padalac, sorry to upset you. Wikipedia which is far from perfect has some great info on the topic - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/India_Pale_Ale.

4% or less is key for the English version of the IPA.

Also, the English IPA on BJCP is great and it shows just below the American IPA. Both are very different -http://www.bjcp.org/styles04/Category14.php

The IPA book by Mitch Steele is an awesome read if you're in to beer history.

I hate overly bitter but love hop aroma and flavor, so I am able to build and brew beers that keep bittering additions low to none at all. Hop bursting is one of my favorite techniques.
 
Ah. Well, I use pretty flocculant yeast when I can (WlP001 has been pretty good for me), but sometimes I use Denny's Favorite 50 when I want a strong malt presence too, and it takes forever to floc out! But normally, the beers are done by about day 5, pretty clear by day 8-9, dryhopped for 5 days and then kegged. If I add more hops to the keg, it takes a while for that aroma to "work", since it's at fridge temps but normally the aroma is just fine.

I think pitching a healthy yeast starter, having the OG in the 60s, using whirlfloc in the kettle, and kegging clear beer means having mine ready really early.

Yopper most of my ales can be ready in that amount of time also. A starter ahead of time and most of my ales are done fermenting in about 4 days. Going into the keg about a week later and the beer can be ready quite fast.
 
I almost always leave them in there for the life of the keg. My kegerator is at 40 degrees, and I've never had a problem at all with that. I don't generally keep an IPA keg at room temperature, but I did once. I dryhopped in the keg at room temperature for 5 days, then put the keg in the kegerator. I'm drinking it now, about 10 days later (literally, right now!) and it's great.

Yooper I love dry hopping my IPA in the keg but need to use something other than the muslin bags. They always end up sucking to the dip tube in the keg towards the end. Slow flowing but they still flow.
 
I use tightly woven muslin bags for pellets (and sometimes leaf) and tea ball strainers often for leaf hops. I've never had a bag end up affecting the diptube, but my diptubes do fit tightly at the bottom of the keg.
 
I am on the bandwagon! I definitely think it is the freshness of the homebrew that puts the commercial beers at a disadvantage. Also, since we are in control of the additions, amounts, and types of hops we use we make exactly what we want. I just made a IIPA that is almost done carbing and I will most certainly drink this one faster than most batches despite it being quite a bit stronger than my average batch because insanely hoppy beers are my favorite by far and the hop "magic" fades far too fast.
 
I still drink commercial IPAs but like my homebrew versions better and I know why.

I brew to my taste not to what is commercially saleable to the larger audience. Therefore if I like it up front and in your face then thats how I brew it, if I like it smooth with a heavy finish then thats how I brew it. There aren't many commercial brews that get my mood at the right times, and thats why mine are better than theirs.
 
I still drink commercial IPAs but like my homebrew versions better and I know why.

I brew to my taste not to what is commercially saleable to the larger audience. Therefore if I like it up front and in your face then thats how I brew it, if I like it smooth with a heavy finish then thats how I brew it. There aren't many commercial brews that get my mood at the right times, and thats why mine are better than theirs.

+ 1 to that!!
 
I use tightly woven muslin bags for pellets (and sometimes leaf) and tea ball strainers often for leaf hops. I've never had a bag end up affecting the diptube, but my diptubes do fit tightly at the bottom of the keg.

I'll need to get the strainers for my kegs as I usually use leaf for dry hopping.
 
I use muslin bags, with whole leafs, but I tie my hops bag so it is slightly above the bottom of the keg with dental floss. The tape kind of floss is thin enough and the wax will seal. I tie off to the handle. No worry about bags sucking up.

As to the original direction of the post. My IPA's tend to go way faster than the commercials I get. I fully believe its due to the freshness.

I'm typically 14 days grain to glass. Sometimes less. I use US05 in all my IPA's, dry hop and often keg hop, and use gelatin in the keg for fining. Typically have crystal clear beer by day 17.
 
adamjackson said:
thanks Yooper. To Padalac, sorry to upset you. Wikipedia which is far from perfect has some great info on the topic - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/India_Pale_Ale.

4% or less is key for the English version of the IPA.

Also, the English IPA on BJCP is great and it shows just below the American IPA. Both are very different -http://www.bjcp.org/styles04/Category14.php

Hang on mate, you guys are just so wrong it's not funny. One second you say an english IPA is 4% or less, next you say, here -read the bjcp guidelines, which clear states minimum OG of 1050, while stating the beer should be highly attenuated. This 4% error is what made me reply in the first place. Then again bjcp is not really relevant. I am not talking about american 'English style ipa'. I'm talking about 19th century recipes, which were often higher in alcohol and hop bitterness. Everything you said about that was inaccurate, from the low abv, to the oak aging to the using only European hops. Don't know where you get that from as even the bjcp doesn't state any of those things.

If you want to know a well researched example of an English 19th century ipa, then look at meantime ipa. It's around 75 ibus and 7.5% abv.

Anyway I'm pretty sure, based on what you've written, that you don't care one way or the other about any of this. My initial comment wasn't trying to contradict you or say that an aged ipa would be truer to style or anything. I don't give a monkeys about style guidelines. Just pointing out it was interesting or even ironic that a beer designed originally to be aged is now desired as fresh as possible, not in a bad way. Then you start giving me this crap about English ipas being 4%. Check your facts next time you try and 'pwn' someone. And yooper trooper, you got your wish I'm outta here. I don't want to frequent a forum that's moderated with an iron fist. If you guts can't take a bit of robust language you shouldn't be in the pub drinking a beer in the first place IMO.
 
The IPA was radically different in England between the 19th and 20th century. Wasn't it limited to 3% at one point because of the war? US hops were used in old English IPAs because England couldn't grow enough.

Anyhoo.. I like my IPA old school minus the boat ride and aging.
 
And yooper trooper, you got your wish I'm outta here. I don't want to frequent a forum that's moderated with an iron fist. If you guts can't take a bit of robust language you shouldn't be in the pub drinking a beer in the first place IMO.

Just waiting to get out of the penalty box so you can go right back in?
 
Hang on mate, you guys are just so wrong it's not funny. One second you say an english IPA is 4% or less, next you say, here -read the bjcp guidelines, which clear states minimum OG of 1050, while stating the beer should be highly attenuated. This 4% error is what made me reply in the first place. Then again bjcp is not really relevant. I am not talking about american 'English style ipa'. I'm talking about 19th century recipes, which were often higher in alcohol and hop bitterness. Everything you said about that was inaccurate, from the low abv, to the oak aging to the using only European hops. Don't know where you get that from as even the bjcp doesn't state any of those things.

If you want to know a well researched example of an English 19th century ipa, then look at meantime ipa. It's around 75 ibus and 7.5% abv.

Anyway I'm pretty sure, based on what you've written, that you don't care one way or the other about any of this. My initial comment wasn't trying to contradict you or say that an aged ipa would be truer to style or anything. I don't give a monkeys about style guidelines. Just pointing out it was interesting or even ironic that a beer designed originally to be aged is now desired as fresh as possible, not in a bad way. Then you start giving me this crap about English ipas being 4%. Check your facts next time you try and 'pwn' someone. And yooper trooper, you got your wish I'm outta here. I don't want to frequent a forum that's moderated with an iron fist. If you guts can't take a bit of robust language you shouldn't be in the pub drinking a beer in the first place IMO.

We all have limited knowledge in some ways. I can't lecture you about water chemistry or clearly can't lecture about IPAs..

My knowledge at least is backed up by a URL to the BJCP guidelines where I tried to use that to back up what I wrote. My challenge to you is that you please post some links here that explain in depth what the English IPA was so then we can have an informed discussion.

I just don't believe you in the same way you didn't believe what I had to say. If I'm wrong, send me some links here to show me what was the correct way and we all learn something.

Sorry I misquoted the proper ABV of original English style IPAs.


....but, the root of this thread is still about American IPAs. I'm not about to brew a super low ABV IPA, stick it in a barrel and sit on it for 3 months while I ride around the atlantic so I can get that quality salt-water air inoculation and then serve it at room temperature. No matter what the specifics are, I think all of us agree that this was a discussion of American IPAs.

Sorry moderators if my response is too argumentative. I'm having problems finding resources on what the details were of english IPAs hundreds of years ago..it's mostly guys like us arguing over it with little historical evidence.
 
If you guts can't take a bit of robust language you shouldn't be in the pub drinking a beer in the first place IMO.

I'm sure you're correct. Saying "FU" to people is certainly a nice way to interact, not to mention a great way to have meaningful conversations, with give and take.

I'm sure you'll find a great homebrewing forum with a wealth of knowledge that will suit you just fine, complete with insults, if you just look hard enough.

See ya!
 
If it's info about the history of the IPA you seek, check out "IPA: Brewing Techniques, Recipes and the Evolution of India Pale Ale" by Mitch Steele - http://www.brewerspublications.com/...-recipes-and-the-evolution-of-india-pale-ale/

I think the main problem with all the discussion is that IPAs have evolved and changed over the years, depending on different laws, wars and what people wanted to drink. I couldn't put the book down and burned thru it in 2 days.

:mug:
 
It seems these days, the only IPAs I care to buy are local Vermont beers like Heady and Hill Farmstead. Any IPA that's nation-wide at my local beer store simply doesn't match my homebrew. I'm a terrible homebrew but I keg so usually I'm drinking an IPA 14 days after brewing it...it is just the freshness that makes my homebrew my favorite go to IPA? Or is it something else?

Am I alone in this one?

I'm definitely picky about my IPAs nowadays but I don't necessarily think my home brew is the reason for it. I definitely seek fresh IPAs, and when they're not fresh, it's noticeable. Example: Lagunitas' Hop Stoopid is an awesome, aromatic DIPA. However, when it's not fresh it's downright undrinkable.

Heady and HFS don't help, of course, because you're guaranteed to get it fresh (unless you sit on a can of Heady or a growler of HFS) and have them at their peak.

With that said, I'm still trying to brew a top-notch IPA that'll make me forego all those other IPAs (except, you know, Heady or HFS :))
 
Yooper I love dry hopping my IPA in the keg but need to use something other than the muslin bags. They always end up sucking to the dip tube in the keg towards the end. Slow flowing but they still flow.

Here's a tip. Sanitize and attach a piece of dental floss to the bag and give it just enough slack for it not to get to the diptube. You get the hoppy goodness, but it never gets a chance to block up.

edit: Snaps beat me to it.
 
Here's a really good article about the history of the IPA:rockin:

Remembered this thread when reading it so thought I'd post.

Should definitely put to rest any notions about the validity of the, erroneous, claims that they were originally sub 4%, or anything other than a Pale Ale.

http://beer.about.com/gi/o.htm?zi=1...ngtechniques.com/library/styles/2_2style.html



India Pale Ale, Part I: IPA and Empire--
Necessity and Enterprise give Birth to a Style

by Thom Tomlinson
In this first of two articles on India Pale Ale, guest author Thom Tomlinson presents the history of the style's invention and early development in 18th century Britain. In the next issue, Tomlinson will review the evolution of American IPA variants and discuss practical considerations for modern brewers.

ROOTS IN EMPIRE AND ADVENTURE
India Pale Ale -- the name stirs up images of tall ships and faraway places. A beer with such a name should have a bold and stirring character, and India Pale Ales (IPAs) usually deliver. The bitterness, hop aroma, fruitiness, and high mineral content characteristic of this style offer adventure in every pint.

The adventure of IPA has proven irresistible to me. Over the past several years I have sampled a wide range of IPAs brewed in Britain and the United States, and these beers have rarely disappointed. This installment of "Brewing in Styles" reviews the events surrounding the creation of the original India Pale Ale recipe and considers the characteristics of 19th century examples of this style. The next issue's installment will look at current interpretations of the style and consider various practical aspects of brewing beers within this theme.

For beer lovers, the history of a style proves interesting and enlightening. This is particularly true for IPA lovers. More than having a place in the history of beer styles, IPA shaped the course of British brewing history. No other style can claim such an influential role, and no other style possesses characteristics more determined by function. IPA was a solution to a problem. For these reasons and more, India Pale Ale deserves special consideration rather than relegation as a simple subheading under pale ale.

THE GREAT BEER PROBLEM
The defining character of IPA is the result of many people's efforts to solve a vexing problem. Imagine, if you will, a country filled with people who love to drink fine ale. That country establishes one of the great naval forces of all time, and in so doing its leaders encounter many challenges. Not the least of those challenges was the one concerning the important beer drinking needs of the navy's sailors and the soldiers and colonists in settlements around the world.

The problem facing the British during the 18th and 19th centuries was that beer did not keep well on long ocean voyages, especially voyages into hot climates. These hot environments often resulted in flat, sour beer. Voyages often lasted months, a long time for British sailors to go without a pint of beer. If such a situation were allowed, sailors would miss not only the cultural aspects of ale, but also the ready source of B vitamins that beer provided.

The importance of beer was not lost on the British Admiralty: ships on station in the English Channel issued a ration of 1 gal of beer per man per day. Those serving in the cool Baltic waters also had access to beer. It was on long voyages into the tropics that the men suffered the most from lack of beer.

So how would the enterprising British solve the great beer problem? The Admiralty was desperate for a way to transport beer to the far corners of the globe.

Mathias reports that the Royal Society got involved as early as the mid-18th century(1).
Several ideas were considered, including freezing out water to concentrate the beer. Finally, in 1772 Henry Pelham, Secretary to the Commissioner of Victualling, suggested that brewers simmer away most of the water from their wort. Once at sea the sailors could add water and let the beer "stand to acquire a proper spirit and briskness." Later that year, and early in 1773, Captain Cook and the officers of the Endeavour reported that the concentrate, combined with yeast and spruce, did quite well in cooler waters. The Admiralty was cautiously pleased with the results. However, reports about the concentrate's bad performance in warmer climates and inconsistent performance in cooler climates led to the demise of on-board brewing from concentrate in the Royal Navy (1).

Nevertheless, on-board brewing with concentrates won some favor in other quarters, and some examples survived to modern times, such as sweet nonalcoholic malt beverages (Mather's Black beer of Yorkshire, for example). On the continent, Braunschweiger Mumme, a German wort concentrate, achieved a certain degree of commercial success.

Had the concentrate scheme been successful for on-board brewing, the Royal Admiralty's alliance with rum, which began in 1740, would probably have been less strong. Rum's high alcohol content conserved space, and it could be easily cut into grog with water, citrus juice, and sugar. Beer was regarded as more temperate and healthful than hard liquor. Despite the Admiralty's preference for beer, however, the failure of the concentrate scheme forced them to settle for rum.

In the end, the Admiralty failed to solve the great beer problem, and British troops and colonists continued to need ales. For other than cultural reasons, colonists often preferred imported ales to local water supply, but in tropical places like India, local temperatures prevented successful brewing. The Indian market, although a difficult one, remained open.

THE EAST INDIES MARKET
The East Indies market proved intractable for two reasons. First, after Britain had established itself in India (ca. 1772), it had a large number of troops and an increasing number of European civilians to supply with beer. Second, the arduous, three- to five-month journey proved a difficult passage for the sweet dark ales of England. Ships left London, and sometimes Liverpool, between late November and early February, arriving in India between March and May. The winter departures ensured that the ships reached the Indian Ocean before the monsoon season. Heading south from London, the ships crossed the equator, cruised south along the coast of Africa, rounded the Cape of Good Hope, and then crossed the Indian Ocean to reach Bombay, Calcutta, and other ports of call.

Even though the hogsheads* of ale were stored in the lowest level of the ship's hull -- the coolest place in the ship -- the temperature fluctuations were tremendous. Figure 1 (shown in color on the front cover of this issue) shows average sea surface temperatures for 1855-1884 (2). These data indicate that for the first few weeks of the voyage, water temperatures were roughly 52 degrees F. As the ships entered equatorial regions, temperatures climbed to 81 degrees F. Slightly past the midpoint of the journey, the ships passed around the Cape of Good Hope where temperatures dropped to between 65 and 69 degrees F. Once in the southern parts of the Indian Ocean, water temperatures climbed to 73 degrees F for several weeks of the voyage. Finally, as the vessel headed north toward India, surface temperatures would reach 83-86 degrees F. Combine the temperature fluctuations with the normal rocking motion of such a journey and the rough waters off of southern Africa, and you have one hellish trip for an ale.

Despite these obstacles, however, brewers did try to establish exports to India. Early shipments to India contained bottled porters, the favorite beer in London, which typically arrived flat, musty, and sour. Some improvement came when Benjamin Wilson and Samuel Allsopp tried a new packaging technique designed to take advantage of the very shipping problems that were causing so many difficulties. They advised brewers to uncork freshly conditioned porters, allowing the beer to go flat, then recork the bottles and load them aboard departing ships. These were the procedures adopted by the London wine merchant Kenton, who was the first person to ship porter to India. In theory, the natural rocking motion of the ship helped the beers achieve a second carbonation and "briskness" by the time they reached India (1). Two problems remained: The beers lacked shelf life, and beer drinking preferences tended to change in the tropics; the dark ales of London were possibly less satisfying to Britons in the heat of India.

Why would brewers continue their persistent efforts to attack the East Indies market? In addition to the problems created by the journey, the staggering delay between accepting orders and delivering the beer meant that a specific market could change dramatically before the beer arrived. Once the beer did reach India, it had to pass the inspection of official tasters whose evaluations could deny the beer entry into India or hurt the beer's auctioning price (3).

Apparently, however, high demand and low shipping rates could result in huge profit margins. The low outward rates for shipping beer to India (rates from London to Bombay equaled those from London to Edinburgh) are attributable to at least two factors. First, India was self-sufficient in most things, and beer was one of the few British commodities needed. Second, the valuable shipments of silks and spices returning from India more than covered the expenses of travel.

The low shipping rates encouraged brewers to accept the risky gamble. Nevertheless, shipping costs still exceeded 20% of the beer cost; 120 hogsheads of ale bound for the major East Indian markets of Madras, Bombay, and Calcutta, for example, would cost 753 pounds Sterling. This price included 540 pounds Sterling for the ale, 118 pounds Sterling for freight and primage, and 95 pounds Sterling for bottles and corks (1); insurance costs were extra.

HODGSON'S SOLUTION
The answer to the great beer problem finally came from a recipe and not an innovation in brewing technology. George Hodgson, brewer at the Bow Brewery in East London, began shipping Hodgson's India Ale during the 1790s. The ale was a version of his pale ale, which Londoners had been drinking since the mid-1750s. These copper-colored or reddish-bronze beers were called pale ales because they were lighter in color than the popular brown ales, porters and stouts (4). Hodgson's pale ales were some of the first beers in the world that were paler than black or brown.

Before the advent of refrigeration and pasteurization, the brewer's only weapons against spoilage were alcohol and hops. Alcohol provided an unfriendly environment for microbial action, and the isohumulone content of the hops inhibited the growth of Lactobacillus. Thus, high alcohol content and high hopping rates could protect beer from the souring associated with long storage times. Hodgson took his pale ale recipe, increased the hop content considerably, and raised the starting gravity by the addition of extra grain and sugar. Extremely high attenuation resulted in strong ales with high alcohol content.

Hodgson also added dry hops, probably an early version of Kent Goldings, to the casks at the time of priming, which provided a further measure against infection. During priming he conditioned the beer with more sugar than was typical for pale ales. The high priming rate probably helped keep the yeast alive during the long voyage. Although high priming rates might suggest excessive carbonation, leakage from the wooden casks may have offset this effect. In any case a "high state of condition" would have been important to offset large amount of carbon dioxide lost during the primitive bottling process used when the beer arrived in India (India was too warm for bottle conditioning). The result was a very bitter, alcoholic, and sparkling pale ale that could withstand the rigors of travel and shelf life in India. Hodgson's success became legendary.

Thanks in part to Hodgson's recipe, the Indian market expanded rapidly. A review of the export numbers emphasizes the recipe's impact. In 1750, about 1480 barrels* left England for India; in 1775, 1680 barrels were exported. This minor increase of 200 barrels in annual shipments after 25 years was eclipsed by the huge increase in exports over the next 25 years -- in 1800, 9000 barrels were exported, an increase of about 7300 barrels in annual shipments (1). That increase surpasses the entire amount of beer exported to India in the previous 100 years. The success generated by Hodgson's recipe encouraged other brewers to try to enter the potentially lucrative market.

Hodgson's success in India, however, added one more obstacle for other brewers' enterprises. The Circular on Beer Trade to India reported in 1829 that Hodgson controlled the market to India by a number of methods, some of them considered unethical.

The troops on Bengal loved pale ales, and local businesses could have sold more of it except for periodic and huge increases in the price of the imports. The market relied so heavily on Hodgson's deliveries that he could engage in a certain amount of price fixing. According to the circular, when Hodgson got word that another brewer was shipping ale to India he would flood the market with large quantities of his ale, effectively driving down the selling price. Most brewers attempting to establish a trade lost considerable sums of money. After frightening off a rival in such a fashion, Hodgson would limit the next year's exports, sending the price skyrocketing and recovering lost profits from the previous year. The rates could swing from 20 rupees per hogshead when Hodgson flooded the market to 200 rupees per hogshead when beer was in short supply (5).

In the 1820s, Hodgson's bold efforts to completely dominate the Indian market backfired. First, he began denying importers credit for their purchases, forcing many of the cash-poor suppliers to seek help from other breweries. In addition, Hodgson set up his own import business in India. The Hodgson family had a strong determination to hold on to the market; not only had founder George Hodgson designed the first India Pale Ale, but his son Mark Hodgson played a critical role in establishing the family's import business on the subcontinent. This import business squeezed out the middle men in India, resulting in more profits -- and fewer friends -- for Hodgson.

BURTON MAKES HISTORY
A commercial success of this sort was bound to be copied. The Salt, Allsopp, and Bass breweries all claim to have been the first to copy Hodgson's style. Regardless of who was first, the successful recreation of Hodgson's recipe led to the ascendency of Burton-on-Trent as the brewing capital of England. The success of the Burton ales provide an important brewing lesson in water quality and characteristics.

Burton's brewing history extended back to the brewing monasteries of the 1200s. Its reputation for darker styles was later eclipsed by the recognition gained by its pale ales. The popular nut brown ale of the Trent valley began losing local popularity after Allsopp successfully produced its first pale ale in 1822 (4).

Why were Salt, Allsopp, and Bass interested in the Indian market? As a result of the Napoleonic wars, the Burton breweries lost the important and successful Baltic trade in 1807. In 1821, a dinner meeting between the director of the East India Company, Mr. Marjoribanks, and Samuel Allsopp set up events that changed the course of brewing history.

At dinner that fateful night, Samuel Allsopp expressed concern over the state of his business, given the loss of the lucrative Baltic markets. Mr. Marjoribanks alerted Allsopp to the Indian market, of which Allsopp was unaware. Marjoribanks pointed out that India offered ". . . a trade that can never be lost:[sic] for the climate is too hot for brewing. . . . We are now dependent upon Hodgson who has given offense to most of the merchants of India. But your Burton ale, so strong and sweet, will not suit our market." Marjoribanks' butler provided the men with a bottle of Hodgson's ale, and Marjoribanks described a market that preferred pale, sparkling ales (3).

Later, Allsopp presented head brewer and maltster Job Goodhead with a glass of Hodgson's India Ale. After looking at the beer, Goodhead told Allsopp that he could dry his malt to that color. After tasting the ale Goodhead spat it out; the bitterness probably overwhelmed this man raised on the traditionally sweet beers of the Burton region. Goodhead replicated Hodgson's India Ale using a teapot as a pilot mash system, and within one year Allsopp and Bass were challenging Hodgson's market (6).

When establishing his place in the Indian market, Allsopp faced many more problems than just matching color, quality, and flavor with Hodgson's India Ale. Burton brewers had to get their beers to London, the point of departure for most shipments to India. Freight costs for passage on the canals, the major source of transportation, were 60 shilling (3 pounds Sterling) per ton. In addition, thieves along the canal often stole spirits, wine, and beer, replacing the stolen beverage with water. If they were to reach London in good condition, shipments needed protection, further adding to the cost.

Another cost involved the purchase of the special hogshead casks and butts* needed for the enterprise. In order to facilitate business transactions and handling and stowage, the casks needed to be uniform in size and shape. Furthermore, these casks had to be built to withstand the rigors of shipping. The new casks required Allsopp to lay out considerable sums of money before the real venture even began. After reaching London the ale had to get by the English excise officers, and once they arrived in India they had to be approved by tasters who could accept or reject any shipment.

In Allsopp's case, the first news from India was not good. The first consignment ran into trouble with the tasters, and the beer earned only 20 rupees per hogshead while Hodgson received 25 rupees. The second and third consignments reaching India, however, brought 40 rupees per hogshead each. From there, the news got even better. One letter from a Mr. J.C. Bailton stated the following:

With reference to the loss you have sustained in your first shipments, you must have been prepared for that, had you known that market as well as I do: Here almost everything is name, and Hodgson's has so long stood without a rival that it was a matter of astonishment how your ale could have stood the competition; but that it did is a fact, and I myself was present when a butt of yours fetched 136 rupees, and a butt of Hodgson's only 80 rupees at a public sale.

Other letters arriving from merchants in India testified that Allsopp's Ale was the unanimous favorite of the customers. These optimistic reports encouraged Allsopp to increase his efforts in the next shipping season. In that first year he shipped only 34 hogsheads to India, but in his second year he shipped over 300 hogsheads (3).

THE BURTON SECRET
Like Hodgson's India Ale, the Burton export ales were sparkling and strong. The Burton beers were very pale for that time, more so than any previous effort, and the Burton export ales also exceeded all previous efforts in bitterness.

The secret to the Burton brewers' success came from the water, an ingredient often downplayed in beer recipe formulation. The sulfates of the Trent basin helped the Burton beers achieve their clarity and bitterness and allowed the Burton brewers to far exceed Hodgson's India Ale in clarity, hopping rate, and marketability. The high sulfate content allowed brewers to use hopping rates well beyond that compatible with the carbonate water of London. Sulfates actually change the mouthfeel and perception of bitterness. High sulfate content results in a sharp, clean bitterness, unlike the harsh clinging bitterness of highly hopped beers brewed with water high in carbonates.

Bass's 19th century export ales were brewed to an original gravity of not less than 1.060 (15 degrees P). Bass achieved its hop bitterness by using large quantities of Fuggle, Kent Golding, and imported hops. Several breweries reported using Californian and German hops for up to 50% of the bittering additions. Kettle hopping rates could exceed 3 lb/U.S. bbl, with one-quarter to one-third of this total reserved as finishing hops. Long boiling times, usually >2 h, helped maximize hop utilization and contributed to the physical (protein) stability of the beer (7). At racking, Kent Goldings were added as dry hops at rates anywhere from 6 oz to 1 lb/UK bbl (1 UK bbl = 36 Imperial gal, or approximately 43 U.S. gal), adding their special aromatic quality to this highly conditioned ale.

After completing the long voyage, the wooden casks filled with ale would be stillaged and their contents bottled, after which the strong ales could last three months or more (6). The hardy yeasts produced in the Burton Union fermentation system combined with high rates of priming sugar protected the beer on its stormy voyages and helped give it a long shelf life.

An important issue raised in the history of ale involves the degree to which beer flavor profiles were influenced by the presence of Brettanomyces yeast strains. Stouts, porters, and stock ales were brewed using a secondary fermentation with Brettanomyces. The process of vatting (8) was used successfully to get the appropriate flavor profile from the Brettanomyces. However, Wahl and Henius maintained that vatting for pale ales went out of vogue with the success of the Burton brewers, suggesting that IPAs did not use this process (7). Chances of sourness from Lactobacillus would have been further reduced by the low final gravities: well-attenuated ales contain insufficient fermentables for the bacteria, or for that matter the finicky Brettanomyces.

IPA IN THE HOME MARKET
The export ales of Hodgson and the Burton brewers were truly export-only products until 1827, when a ship carrying cargo to India was wrecked in the Irish Sea. The cargo was auctioned, alerting locals to the existence of India Pale Ale. The pale ales became a success in Liverpool, and shortly afterward Londoners were clamoring for these export ales. Although other factors such as changing public tastes probably played a role (9), the importance of this serendipitous event should not be downplayed. At any rate, the public liked the effervescent pale ales whose clarity, bitterness, and refreshing character set them apart from the sweet, strong, nut brown ales of Burton and the mild ales, porters, and stouts of London and Dublin. IPA became a success in the European market, too, and local imitations were brewed in Norway and even Germany (7).

THE PAST 100 YEARS
A record of the original gravities of beers brewed in the Burton area suggests that by 1880-1900 most exports were of the India Pale Ale variety (Table I). A record of Bass products shows gravities between 1.060 and 1.070 for both cask and bottled pale ales released between 1887 and 1901. Bass's bottled export of 1901 had an original gravity of 1.064, and its bottled White Label had an original gravity of 1.062. In addition, these beers finished at remarkably low terminal gravities; for example, Dog's Head finished at 1.003 and White Label at 1.007. When reviewing records of British beers for this period, remember that independent contractors bottled the beers, and a product brewed by Bass might turn up on the market under several different labels, though all bearing the Bass triangle.

IPA's success was not lost on American brewers. Brewers in the northeastern United States brewed pale ales with original gravities between 1.060 and 1.076 during this period and labeled them as India Pale Ale, enabling them to cash in on the lucrative export trade at a time when ale consumption in the United States was declining because of the lager revolution. Ballantine's IPA can be traced back to the early part of the 20th century when IPAs were still strong in both popularity and alcohol content; it has been preserved through an owner's idiosyncracies (Ballantine also once brewed an extremely strong "Burton Ale").

In some ways, ale brewing in the United States remained rather conservative because it was subject to different changes in market tastes and different regulatory pressure from that in Britain. Ales were in decline well before Prohibition; cream ale was invented as a counter to pale lagers. Other ale styles, such as porter, remained truer to their 19th century antecedents.

A different picture emerges when we look at British brewing practices. Recall that 19th century starting gravities were in the 1.060-1.070 range. Today IPA gravities in Britain start as low as 1.040 and seldom run as high as 1.060. The great gravity drop that we see in British ales since the late 19th century are the result of changes in the British taxation system, which effectively penalized high-gravity beers, and a parallel (or ensuing) shift in consumer preference. These changes eventually resulted in so-called "India Pale Ales" that were indistinguishable from ordinary pale ales. In Britain today, IPA is often merely a synonym for best or special bitter.

MODERN IPA BREWING PRACTICE
The next installment of "Brewing in Styles" will review the current state of the India Pale Ale style in the United States and will also look at an interesting project in England that recreated a 19th century India Pale Ale. Most important, the article will review critical aspects of brewing India Pale Ales in both modern and traditional variants.

REFERENCES
(1) Peter Mathias, The Brewing Industry in England 1700-1880 (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, 1959).

(2) S.D. Woodruff, R.J. Slutz, R.L. Jenne, and P.M. Steurer, "A Comprehensive Ocean-Atmosphere Data Set," Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc. 68, 1239-1250 (1987).

(3) Buchnan, Burton and Its Bitter Beer (1858).

(4) Michael Jackson, New World Guide to Beer (Running Press, Philadelphia, 1988).

(5) Circular on the Beer Trade of India (1829).

(6) Michael Dorber, "News Release on White Horse India Pale Ale," (The White Horse on Parsons Green, London, 1993).

(7) R. Wahl and M. Henius, American Handy Book of the Brewing, Malting, and Auxiliary Trades, vol II (Wahl-Henius Institute, Chicago, 1908).

(8) Roger Bergen, "A Stout Companion," BrewingTechniques 1 (4), 18-21 (1993).

(9) Terry Foster, Pale Ale (Brewers Publications, Boulder, Colorado, 1990).

FURTHER READING
Eckhardt, Fred, Essentials of Beer Style (Fred Eckhardt Associates, Portland, Oregon, 1989).

Jackson, Michael, New World Guide to Beer (Running Press, Philadelphia, 1988).

Line, David, Brewing Beers like Those You Buy (The Amateur Winemakers Publication Ltd, Andover, Hants., UK, 1982).

Miller, David, The Complete Handbook of Home Brewing (Storey Communications, Pownal, Vermont, 1988).

Sargent, A.J., Seaways of the Empire (A. & C. Black, London, 1930).

Wahl, R. and M. Henius, American Handy Book of the Brewing, Malting, and Auxiliary Trades, vol. II (Wahl-Henius Institute, Chicago, 1908).

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