Does it taste like (I know this sounds odd) your sucking on a penny. Like a metallic bite sort of like tin foil taste...but really like a penny right in the middle of your tongue?
I just did an Azacca beer..... It is similar to what you describe. Really don't like it at all. Super disappointed. Those hops taste NOTHING like the description - Thin, Sharp..... just not good. I don't see them finding their way back into a beer of mine.
Wellllll....... I am not sure how, or why, but my azacca beer has actually come around and is pretty good. Still not my favorite all time hop or anything - but this is now a quite good pale ale. It is not as good as hops like citra, mosaic, galaxy..... and I think the description of it is misleading.
I have never had a beer change as much as this one has. It was truly "a dumper" when I tasted it around dry hopping/kegging time. It was "bad" shortly after putting on tap. It has gotten a little better since and is now pretty darn good.
It is lighter in flavor than some of the bigger hops.... but, nice and citrusy. I forgive you azacca - I might have to even use the rest of the bag![]()
I just did an Azacca beer..... It is similar to what you describe. Really don't like it at all. Super disappointed. Those hops taste NOTHING like the description - Thin, Sharp..... just not good. I don't see them finding their way back into a beer of mine.
In regard to yeast.... I am a conan/vermont IPA fan.
Wellllll....... I am not sure how, or why, but my azacca beer has actually come around and is pretty good. Still not my favorite all time hop or anything - but this is now a quite good pale ale. It is not as good as hops like citra, mosaic, galaxy..... and I think the description of it is misleading.
I have never had a beer change as much as this one has. It was truly "a dumper" when I tasted it around dry hopping/kegging time. It was "bad" shortly after putting on tap. It has gotten a little better since and is now pretty darn good.
It is lighter in flavor than some of the bigger hops.... but, nice and citrusy. I forgive you azacca - I might have to even use the rest of the bag![]()
not that I've used Azacca, but Founder's single hop Azacca IPA is great. there must be a specific way of treating it
I've done many NE style IPA/Pale ales and have used everything from US04, WY 1098, WLP007, WY1318, Gigayeast Conan, Omega Conan, and Imperial Organic Conan and it seems like to me that there is only marginal difference on all these yeasts with the right grain bill (plenty of oats and wheat), proper Ca:Cl:So4 ratio, and proper dry hopping techniques (rouse the dry hop additions). My preference is 1098 or 1318 or, sometimes a blend of the two and I think both work nicely but each works better with different hop profiles.
So my thought I had this AM was trying the above technique with a chico strain. Has anyone done this ? And I mean with like 20%+ of grain bill being flaked oats/wheat and with above described water profile and dry hop techniques ? I know the consensus is that the english strains provide fruity esters that work with the dry hops, but would be interesting to see if the finished product is still hazy and displays a nice hop profile. I'd imagine you'd get a more restrained yeast profile, which could be interesting in a NE style to see how that presents itself. Not that the yeast profile in a finished NE style is undesirable. Just curious what it would be like. I'm wondering if this is what Lawson's is doing since they've been on record noting use of Chico and it's clearly a different type of haze/hop profile than the other NE breweries.....almost looks like some of the heavier hopped Toppling Goliath beers, but I'm fairly certain they are using an english strain (WLP 002 ?). I've never seen any posts about using US05 with NE style Ca:Cl:So4 ratios and heavy oat/wheat based grain bills.
I just used 1272 for a series of beers - it was fantastic. I liked it as much.... maybe even more???? than Conan which has been my standby for the last couple years.
I have been using a slightly "bigger" version of this recipe;
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/showthread.php?t=568046
OG in the 1.055-1.060 range
40% each of Golden Promise and 2 Row.
7.5% Flaked Oats
5% Flaked Barley
2.5% each of Flaked wheat, wheat and honey malt
140:70 Sulfate: Chloride (or maybe 1:1 ratio in the 100-140 range). pH around 5.4 for mash and kettle.
Hopping schedule as outlined in OP.
But, yeah - the 1272 was really great.
What temp did you end up fermenting at?
I just used 1272 for a series of beers - it was fantastic. I liked it as much.... maybe even more???? than Conan which has been my standby for the last couple years.
I have been using a slightly "bigger" version of this recipe;
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/showthread.php?t=568046
OG in the 1.055-1.060 range
40% each of Golden Promise and 2 Row.
7.5% Flaked Oats
5% Flaked Barley
2.5% each of Flaked wheat, wheat and honey malt
140:70 Sulfate: Chloride (or maybe 1:1 ratio in the 100-140 range). pH around 5.4 for mash and kettle.
Hopping schedule as outlined in OP.
But, yeah - the 1272 was really great.
Has anyone tried this approach (i.e. water profile, large percentage of oats/wheat, etc.) for different styles of beer besides IPA's to get that soft, pillowy mouthfeel? I've been thinking of trying it with either a stout or Irish red recipe and just wondering if someone else has had any luck in doing so.
I've done it with a stout and shared with a really really great fellow homebrewer and the first thing he commented on was the soft mouthfeel.
Basically comes down to what you want the finished product to be like.
Anchor Liberty strain. Interesting. I believe I read about that. Do you know where 1272 stems from ? I'd assume Conan was derived from Boddingtons and some sort of drift over time created Conan. Seem to recall reading Greg Noonan sourcing from some English strain and producing Conan. But interested to know if 1272 maybe branched from Boddingtons or something similar
So did you just do a 1:2 Sulfate:Chloride with a mash pH of 5.4 and use about 10-20% of oats/wheat?
Anyone else think hop oils in suspension have something to do with it? I split my last batch in half, so the first half only received one round of dry hops, and the second half got an additional 1 oz per gal keg hopped. I noticed the half with the additional keg hops had a thicker, richer mouth feel than the half without it. My wife also commented on the same thing without me asking her anything about it.
Edit : To be clear, the whole batch got dry hopped in primary, during active fermentation. Then half was left alone and half was dry hopped a second time in the serving keg. More hops is more better.
Ha anyone else here built of starters from dregs of their hoppy beers on tap? Growlers from the brewery? I'm fermenting a beer now with yeast I harvested from a 750 of S&S9. It definitely doesn't seem to perform anything like 1318 which I know a lot of people think is their yeast...
I also built up dregs from one of the farmhouse ale bottles I got (can't remember which) and I definitely got a lot of wine yeast. It has that trademark cherry smell that comes from BM-45 I believe.. there is definitely Brett in there too but clearly no brewing yeast as the wine yeast kills all of it.
I built up dregs from a bottle of Arthur and a bottle of Dorothy. I blended the two yeasts into one starter. I had a saison I fermented with Yeast Bay Saison Blend..... regular "Saison Flavor." However, I then bottled it in 750ml bottles and added some of the Hill Farmstead yeast to each bottle. The beer really transformed in the bottle..... citrus, tart, lemony..... reminded me a lot of Arthur. I am still waiting on it to carb up better at this point.
I since have used that yeast in another Saison as a primary fermentation strain. I just moved it from fermenter to conditioning/secondary keg after 18 days in primary (gravity 1.010). I have to say, I was not super impressed with it out of primary. It was ok. However, it certainly did not taste like the saison where I used it for bottling. Have to see where it goes from here. May end up adding Brett C. to it or something in a couple weeks if it does not seem like flavor is coming around a little better.
I will definitely add it at bottling again though to see if I can replicate the first results in regard to flavor![]()