m3n00b
Well-Known Member
I've done both methods of dry hopping. At room temp in the carboy and in a keg while on draft.
....and??? Any differences you care to share?
I've done both methods of dry hopping. At room temp in the carboy and in a keg while on draft.
Yes, but IME most of what it strips are the harsher flavors. If you're going for aggressive throat-burning bitterness, don't use gelatin. However, I've found that with these harsher flavors removed the fruity/citrus flavors shine through.
What cleaner and sanitizer are you using? Peppery/spicey notes for me came before I started using campden tablets to rid the water of chlorine(or chloramine, can't remember which). Since you built your water up on the last beer from distilled you can rule that out, but maybe the chlorine is still the culprit from your cleaner/sanitzer? Maybe there are something in your keg/lines bottles?
Cooling faster is ALWAYS a good idea.
Almost all IPA's taste the same. Call it American Pale Ale, American IPA, etc... and hop the ever living S... out of it with cascade and what do you get?
The same beer that everyone else is brewing in America.
Has it really come to this? That we are a hops nation? America = way hoppy beer? Don't get me wrong, I like a hoppy American pale ale or IPA occasionally, but is that all we've got? We really need to come up with styles that represent more than just over the top bitter hoppy beer.
Am I alone?
Almost all IPA's taste the same. Call it American Pale Ale, American IPA, etc... and hop the ever living S... out of it with cascade and what do you get?
The same beer that everyone else is brewing in America.
Has it really come to this? That we are a hops nation? America = way hoppy beer? Don't get me wrong, I like a hoppy American pale ale or IPA occasionally, but is that all we've got? We really need to come up with styles that represent more than just over the top bitter hoppy beer.
Am I alone?
This was my initial thought too. Even the batch with distilled water could have been tainted if distilled water wasn't also used in the sanitizer solution for the fermentors and kegs. The chlorophenols caused by trace amounts of chlorine and chloramine often have a spicy or peppery flavor.
Almost all IPA's taste the same. Call it American Pale Ale, American IPA, etc... and hop the ever living S... out of it with cascade and what do you get?
The same beer that everyone else is brewing in America.
Has it really come to this? That we are a hops nation? America = way hoppy beer? Don't get me wrong, I like a hoppy American pale ale or IPA occasionally, but is that all we've got? We really need to come up with styles that represent more than just over the top bitter hoppy beer.
Am I alone?
Maybe you should step back from trying to clone a beer, or make a big hop bomb beer, and make a few SMaSH batches. That way you can adjust just one thing per batch, and trace the source.
If you really want to find out the exact spot where things are going "wrong," the only way to do it is break down your process and analyze every step.
You need to find a process that works for you, and STICK to that process. I tried making a few big IPA's and they sucked, so I took a step back, and started breaking it down, and doing SMaSH batches so I could analyze how every step, ingredient, temperature, etc. was contributing to the final beer.
And a big perk is that SMaSH beers can be delicious.
I also think you aren't adding enough dry-hop. Biologically speaking, aroma (smell) is just as important to taste as actually tasting. Maybe you need to up the dryhop until you find a level that works for you. And there is no doubt that dry hopping changes a beer. I brewed an amarillo-vienna smash, and dry hopped half, and left the other not dry-hopped. The difference was astounding; so much so that the dry-hopped version has been drank and gone, and the non-dry-hopped is sitting around, and I don't think I'll ever drink it.
tl;dr-
Simplify your brew until you know what everything do!
a la everything west coast circa 2005.I do enjoy a good single hop IPA.
All centennial is definitely my favorite (herbal/floral a la Two Hearted). All citra is pretty good too (citrusy a la Simtra). All Cascade is a classic (piney a la... ?).
So if I were to do a SMaSH batch, would everyone recommend centennial or citra? Or what? I think when the hop is described as "piney" it tastes spicy to me. Thanks for the comments! This is really the only style that continues to be just out of reach for me to make exactly what I'm trying to make.
Centennial or Citra would be a good choice. Neither strikes me as piney or spicy at all. Centennial is more floral and a Citra is more mango to my taste.
Nice. You'll probably learn a good deal from the experiment. One thing to consider... Citra is typically not recommended as a bittering hop. Some people experience unpleasant flavors from a 60 min addition. I usually bitter with a neutral hop like Warrior to keep my focus on flavor and aroma components. In fact, since starting my hop experiments I have moved to something like this:
25 IBU of Warrior @ 60 min
2-3 oz. of Variable Hop @ Hopstand (180* for 20 min)
2-3 oz. of Variable Hop @ Dryhop for 3-4 days
I sense a big boom of flying hot wort as the liquid transitions to gas immediately upon touching the wort. Sounds like something to watch through a blast shield