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American IPA Dogfish Head 60 Minute Clone (AG) & Extract

Discussion in 'Homebrew Ale Recipes' started by Yooper, Mar 27, 2007.

 

  1. Yooper

    Ale's What Cures You! Staff Member  

    Posted May 2, 2015
    You could use less warrior if you want, but this beer isn't very bitter so you may not want to reduce them by much.

    For extra hops, best is to vacuum seal them and store them in the freezer.
     
  2. GCarrabs

    Member

    Posted May 2, 2015
    Thanks Yooper!! Cant wait for tomorrow. DME is very expensive so maybe someday I'll learn the AG way
     
  3. Poshlloyd

    Member

    Posted May 4, 2015
    I'm not confident with yeast starters yet.
    I have 2 x 11g packets of nottingham.
    Will one packet pitched straight from the packet be seriously under pitching?

    Thanks guys,
    I'm all set to start this week.
     
  4. Poshlloyd

    Member

    Posted May 10, 2015
    Also, last question.
    I'm going to batch prime before bottling.
    Is 3oz priming sugar enough?

    Many thanks
     
  5. Tegra

    Well-Known Member

    Posted May 11, 2015
    Poshlloyd:

    Hate to be a rebel.... But I think Nottingham can do anything! I use one pack (gently rehydrated and the temperature gradually stepped down) to do 13 gallons!

    Others would say that is stressing but have seen no indication of such.

    Tom
     
  6. Poshlloyd

    Member

    Posted May 11, 2015
    I think that's what I'll do then.
    I hydrate one packet and pitch it on its own. 5 gallons of approx 1.070
     
  7. Yooper

    Ale's What Cures You! Staff Member  

    Posted May 11, 2015
    I like my beer with more of a 'commercially carbed' level, like in commercial bottled beer so I'd go with 4-5 ounces in 5 gallons. Since you may end up with less than 5 gallons at the end due to hops absorbing some of the wort, I'd go with 4-4.5 ounces of priming sugar.
     
  8. Bermed

    Member

    Posted May 12, 2015
    Just brewed the extract version last night!

    Thanks for posting the recipe. I'll post the results.
     
  9. GCarrabs

    Member

    Posted May 20, 2015
    Bottling tonight! Extract version. Tasted great when we racked to secondary last week.
     
  10. kingmatt

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jun 4, 2015
    Hey Yooper, just wanted to let you know I brewed a version of your 60 minute recipe using Ringwood and won the 'better than the original' category at the Clone Brew Wars competition for Philly Beer Week. Thanks again for the awesome recipe!
     
    Yooper likes this.
  11. Yooper

    Ale's What Cures You! Staff Member  

    Posted Jun 5, 2015
    Wow- that's awesome. I'm glad you like it, and so did others. It's still one of my favorite house beers.
     
  12. AndyRN

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jun 6, 2015
    Yoooper, This is the next recipe on my list.

    1. Do you add any adjuncts to your water when making this? I know everyone has different water, but trying to get a feel for this recipe. I'm just now starting to work on adjusting water pH.

    2. I've tried to read through a lot of these posts but there are so many, have you made any adjustments to the original recipe that you liked, but kept it close to DFH60?

    3. It's starting to get warm here so I will probably switch to dry yeast. What dry yeast do you like for this?

    Thanks.
     
  13. sama

    New Member

    Posted Jun 9, 2015
    Hey I've been trying to clone this beer for a while and this recipe fills in the gaps! Thanks,
    But just a question in the extract recipe u do the boil with only 2.5 gallons of water and then add the remaining 2.5+ after chilling your wort, does the beer end up tasting watered down? And if I have the capability to should I try and boil all 5 gallons?
    I'm still pretty new to the brewing world so thanks for this awesome recipe and the help,
    Sama
     
  14. Subdivisions

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jun 12, 2015
    The OP boils 2.5 gallons and tops up to 5 in the fermenter. You'll notice the boil volume says 2.5 and batch volume is 5. It doesn't water it down since the gravity is much higher in the smaller boil.

    If you do a full boil then you'll want to go with the all grain recipe hop schedule. The extract version hops are increased to account for the partial boil volume.
     
  15. Yooper

    Ale's What Cures You! Staff Member  

    Posted Jun 20, 2015
    1. Yes, I target a mash pH of 5.4 and a sulfate level of about 150 ppm. That gives a ca level of about 80 ppm, and other minerals are minimal.

    2. I usually no longer do "continuous" hopping, just because it's simpler to do it as a couple of additions and I noticed no difference. Sometimes I had more hops at flameout, as I love the simcoe/amarillo combo- but then it's more of my own "house IPA" and not a DFH clone.

    3. For dry yeast, S05 at 68 degrees would be the one to use. I've used BRY-97 with good results as well.
     
  16. Sampson11

    Member

    Posted Jul 15, 2015
    I just bottled this last night and if it tastes half as good once it is conditioned and carbonated as it did when I was sampling it this will be my favorite beer I have brewed so far. Thanks for the recipe and the great discussion in this thread about this brew. It turned out great and tastes like hop heaven in a glass.
     
  17. summerofgeorge

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 7, 2015
    I've tried looking through the posts here but there are soooo many! What's the consensus on the mash temp? I see Yooper referring to mashing a little higher but I'm not sure how high that is.
     
  18. boicutt

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 7, 2015
    I mash at 152 and it seems to be perfect for it.
     
  19. summerofgeorge

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 8, 2015
    I appreciate it! I hit 152 right on and just finished sparging. Waiting to get this up to a boil to start the fun with the continuous hopping. :mug:
     
  20. AndyRN

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Aug 14, 2015
    So I brewed this on 7-3-15. Mashed at 153.3 and fly sparged at 168. My OG was 1.066 and FG was 1.013. My final volume was a little under, maybe .25 gallon. Pitched 2 packets of s05. Fermented at 71F (as cold as I can get it w/o swamp cooler) I had to up my grain bill to match my efficiency.

    Dry hop on 7-23, keg conditioned on 7-24 (about 36 hours dry hop), and tapped it today (8-14-2015)

    This was my first IPA and fifth AG batch. (been home-brewing about a year now).

    I can say without question, this is my best batch of beer yet. The recipe was great. I have only had DFH 60 one time and it was a little old but I really enjoyed it, I would put this up against it any day of the week. I was nervous it would not turn out because I had used the 5.2 stabilizer and the pH was 5.83. (I have since moved on from that and gone to RO water and adjusting from there.) The hop flavor/aroma is perfect, bitterness is right where I want it, color/clarity is great...

    Anyways, anyone on the fence about this recipe, just do it and don't look back. Thanks Yooper for posting.
     
  21. brewpug

    Member

    Posted Aug 16, 2015
    Brewing a double batch of this tomorrow. One will be with Wyeast American Ale and one will be with Wyeast American II. Should be an interesting comparison! The II is supposed to be fruitier. Thanks for the recipe!!
     
  22. stever1000

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Sep 22, 2015
    I'm looking for a recipe for my first homebrew IPA and this recipe seems very popular. How bitter vs sweet is this beer? I LOVE hoppy (aroma and flavour) IPA's but not when they are very bitter as well. Where does this beer stand? Any comments would be appreciated :)
     
  23. mariahman

    Active Member

    Posted Sep 22, 2015
    Stever1000, grab some IPA's at the store and find one you like. Do some research on hops too- you can sub the variety of hops or when you add them to the boil. Even if you choose the 60 min IPA, maybe make it your own by using Mosaic hops instead of another. Learning and understanding the small nuances of home brewing is what makes it such a great hobby. Have fun and report back!
     
  24. Jwin

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Sep 22, 2015
    Haven't brewed this but had my fair share retail. It's not a bitter beer face beer by any means. Well balanced.
     
  25. stever1000

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Sep 23, 2015
    Excellent, that's what I want to hear

    Unfortunately they aren't too easy to come by in around me in this part of Canada (specifically Dogfish Head). From what I understand (bittering vs aroma vs flavour hops) if I want to lower the IBU I need to focus on less bittering hops at the beginning of the boil. I will research more prior to purchasing the hops for this recipe. Thanks! :mug:
     
  26. DapperD

    Active Member

    Posted Sep 26, 2015
    Mashing this recipe as I type!
     
  27. Neptune

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Sep 29, 2015
    moving to another thread. sorry
     
  28. Jwin

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Sep 29, 2015
    Slow cooling could cause more bitter/less aroma as well
     
  29. AndyRN

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Sep 30, 2015
    I would not change this recipe in the slightest. I brew it "as is" and is very well balanced. I said it before, I would put this up against any store bought IPA. I had a buddy over yesterday and he tried it and he couldn't stay out of it.
     
  30. Andyoesq

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Sep 30, 2015
  31. Neptune

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 2, 2015
    What are your additions/times when you don't do the "continuous" hopping?
     
  32. nzeman20

    Active Member

    Posted Oct 10, 2015
    would it benefit the head retention of this recipe adding 0.5 lb of terrified wheat or something similar?
     
  33. Yooper

    Ale's What Cures You! Staff Member  

    Posted Oct 10, 2015
    15/5/0, evenly divided.

    You could, but I've never needed it.
     
  34. GRBC

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 11, 2015

    A seasonally appropriate autocorrect. boo!
     
  35. stever1000

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 13, 2015
    I can't get warrior hops, and I read in this thread that people substitute Magnum instead. However, when I google "warrior hop substitute" nugget comes up instead. Which hop would be better suited to this recipe?
     
  36. Jwin

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 13, 2015
    Magnum is fine.
     
  37. stever1000

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 14, 2015
    Picked some up today, thanks for the quick reply :)
     
  38. stever1000

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 16, 2015
    Made this today, following the recipe except used Magnum instead of warrior. All my hops were a bit higher AA% but I used them as is anyway instead of ordering an odd amount.
    I used extract and my OG is 1.070. To make up for the higher gravity I used a yeast slurry from a recent pale ale to ensure there is enough yeast to chew through all the sugar.
    Can't wait to see how this turns out!!
     
  39. stever1000

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 26, 2015
    Just under two weeks later I am at 1.012 with an OG of 1.070... 7.6% My old slurry chewed right through all the sugar :D
    Going to dry hop in a couple days for a week, then bottle and forget about it for a couple months! Very excited to try :mug:
     
  40. Oscan

    Member

    Posted Oct 30, 2015
    This is a great looking recipe Yooper!

    I have a question though, would mashing this in a 5 gallon cooler result in too thick a mash? Would my efficiency suffer, or would I end up with a stuck sparge or something?
     
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