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  1. J

    New England IPA "Northeast" style IPA

    This is a very controversial topic in homebrewing right now. I think a lot of people do what I and Dgallo describe - avoid unnecessary oxidation on the hot side. If you want to follow the total LoDo process from start to finish it is a labor and equipment intensive process. I pre-treat my...
  2. J

    New England IPA "Northeast" style IPA

    Word. I do the yeast oxygen scavenging method on my mash and sparge water as well as Brewtan-B and campden tablets. I do think it has kept my hazies looking golden and fresh longer. Though I'm not totally LoDo through my entire process so according to the purists I'm doing nothing.
  3. J

    New England IPA "Northeast" style IPA

    Something interesting and new in the homebrew product market - Oxblox 3D. CellarScience® Oxblox 3D | Dissolved Oxygen Reducer | MoreBeer Used to treat mash and sparge water to supposedly reduce oxidation. I wonder what the benefits are vs using SMB or campden tablets?
  4. J

    New England IPA "Northeast" style IPA

    That's interesting. I suppose there's about a million variables in NEIPA that I could be perceiving as chalky without Calcium being the culprit. I really hate high FG/low carb/low bitterness NEIPAs, I wonder if I'm detecting that flabbiness and describing it as chalky.
  5. J

    New England IPA "Northeast" style IPA

    Have you experimented with keeping your calcium lower (around 50ppm)? I saw that Tuba Solo recipe that came out a few months ago and started using a mix of NaCl, KCl, and small amounts of CaCl. I really like the results I'm getting now. The Tuba Solo brewer made a comment about a lot of...
  6. J

    New England IPA "Northeast" style IPA

    @Dgallo - Do you have a recent recipe that includes weights and timing for your hop additions? I know they vary based on hop varietal and recipe, but your beers look great and I'd like to see what your current recipe looks like.
  7. J

    New England IPA "Northeast" style IPA

    Haven't seen too much Cosmic Punch discussion in a while, but have a dry hop question. Are most of you doing an early dry hop for biotransformation + a later dry hop with this yeast or should I just follow the most common method on here of completing fermentation then soft crashing before one...
  8. J

    New England IPA "Northeast" style IPA

    It's been a long time since I brewed one of the original recipes in this thread. You guys have been busy. I'm looking to brew something hazy and hoppy soon. I'm going to do a 2 Row/Spelt/Crystal 10 grain bill as I've seen a lot of people in here do now. I want to try out the Cosmic Punch...
  9. J

    Want to try a different yeast this fall

    If you want to get a little bit more out there, in the last 2 years or so there have been a ton of new dry strains introduced. Lalbrew brought out a dry New England IPA strain, which I believe might be a dry version of Conan. I just bought some of that and a new custom dry yeast blend from...
  10. J

    Want to try a different yeast this fall

    S-04 seems like it would be right up your alley. I think it would probably even work better than S-05 in darker beers, and it is very popular for IPAs right now. You'll get a touch of fruitiness from the yeast, and it will accentuate the malt more. It may finish a little higher than S-05. You...
  11. J

    Save a tasteless beer!

    I would depressurize the keg and dry hop in a paint bag (or similar) with a 6 oz dry hop. You will get a ton of flavor and aroma from that large of a dryhop. If you feel like that is too aggressive you could probably go with 4 oz. Lots of NEIPAs use very little in the boil and move most of...
  12. J

    My homebrew tastes like homebrew....

    A lot of folks have already said this, but 70F/21C ambient is much too high for many ale yeast. In order for you to get good ferm temps, that room would probably need to be around 60F. I'm assuming that is not possible, so I would look into brewing a lot of saisons/Belgian beers. If that's...
  13. J

    New England IPA "Northeast" style IPA

    Saw everyone talking about Dialed In and I wanted to contribute my riff on that beer that is based off of Braufessor's NEIPA and a Dialed In recipe on this site. This is technically a clone of Dialed in w/ Vic Secret since that is what I had. HOME BREW RECIPE: Title: Trilliumish Dialed In...
  14. J

    Can I perform a diacetyl rest while naturally carbonating in the keg?

    I have started using sugar and carbonating naturally in the keg. I generally complete my 10-14 day primary with ales and then give them a week at room temperature to get mostly carbed up. My question is, can I ferment a lager at 48 for 10-14 days (or whatever your lager schedule might be)...
  15. J

    Experiences with different saison yeast blends

    I've been thinking about doing something similar to this. I wonder if you could get more brett influence by making a starter for the Brett C and just pitching the WLP Dupont tube.
  16. J

    3-way IPA (2017) clone

    I just went through Astoria and was able to get some from Fort George on draft, also snagged a 4pk. It was a really good NEIPA. They don't give much in terms of details on the site but they do provide the hops, ABV and an approximation of the color. http://fortgeorgebrewery.com/beer/3-way/...
  17. J

    How much Passionfruit pulp for a Passionfruit Gose?

    I've got a Gose recipe that I like and I'm looking to add Passionfruit to it for an upcoming wedding. Something along the lines of Wicked Weed's Tropicmost Gose I plan on using Goya's Passionfruit pulp: They come in 14oz packages and I'm trying to figure out how much is too much. The...
  18. J

    Saison Hands - Tired Hands

    Reviving an old thread but Jean mentioned in the steal this beer podcast that they pitch their yeast at 85F for their saisons, and let them free rise to around 100F!
  19. J

    New England IPA "Northeast" style IPA

    Thanks, hezagenius. After reading more of the Heady Topper thread I'm wondering if I'm way off. Using RO water, The consensus for HT is a huge gypsum addition (20g for a 5gal batch) and very little CaCL. This is all assuming, of course that Alchemist uses the same water profile for Focal Banger.
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