• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

American IPA with Wyeast 1098 British Ale?

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Beezer94

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 26, 2009
Messages
637
Reaction score
30
Location
Harmony
A couple of IPA's I enjoyed a lot, talk about using a nice fruity yeast, so I thought I would try the same. I have Wyeast 1098 British Ale and Wyeast 1272 American Ale 2. I have a hoppy pale ale conditioning with WLP001 already, a stout fermenting on WLP004 Irish Ale, Hop Rod Rye clone fermenting on the Wyeast 1272, so now I am thinking trying this 1098 British Ale for my next IPA.

The 75% attenuation seems like it should get the beer down to a sufficiently low gravity.

5.25gal batch:
Est. SG: 1.066
Est. FG: 1.016
SRM: 6.7
IBU: 79.3
11.5 lbs Belgian Pale Ale
1 lb Munich 10
8 oz Honey Malt

2.25oz Saphir 4.1% (0.75@20, 0.75@10, 0.75@0)
3oz Citra 11.8% (0.5@20, 0.75@15, 0.5@10, 0.75@5, 0.5@0)
3oz Columbus 11.9% (0.5@20, 0.75@15, 0.5@10, 0.75@5, 0.5@0)

1oz Citra (dry hop 7 days)
1oz Chinook (dry hop 7 days) *EDIT* I used 1oz Columbus instead of chinook
1oz Saphir (dry hop 7 days)

Yeast: Wyeast 1098 British Ale perhaps...

On a weakly hopped beer I'd worry less hop accentuation, but I don't think my recipe will have a lack of hops. Any ideas?
 
Wow, that looks like an interesting recipe. I like the grain bill -- it is very similar to BierMuncher's Kona Pale Ale recipe, minus the cara-pils, and that beer was delicious. I also like relying on the massive late hop addition schedule to produce all your bittering. I predict the hop flavor and aroma will be staggering. As for the yeast, I have heard of people using 007 as a house yeast. My experience is it's not too fruity at all and should attenuate well to let that thing dry out and make the hop flavors shine through.
 
The recipe started as a somewhat clone of Ithaca Flower Power, but once I ordered citra and saphir I changed it up.

Flower Power India Pale Ale
Availability: Year Round, Limited
Enjoy the clover honey hue and tropical nose. Simultaneously Punchy and soothing with a big body a finish that boasts pineapple and grapefruit. Flower power is hopped and dry-hopped five different times throughout the brewing and fermentation process.

Original Gravity: 16 P
ABV: 7.5%

Malt: 2-Row, Honey malt
Hops: Columbus, Cascade, Ahtanum
Dry hop: Simcoe, Amarillo, Centennial

The one thing I don't get is I would need like 85% attenuation to get 7.5% ABV out of 16P, so I just take their OG-ABV with a grain of salt. Some of the ones on their webpage are like 92% attenuation.
 
I'd drink it, looks tasty- plus you went crazy with the hops. With the dry hop I would be intersted to see what aroma stands out there? I think the Chinook will dominate the saphir but I am really interested to hear about the citra/chinook mix and what the aroma ends up like.
 
I did a recipe recently with a very similar grain bill...I used a vienna base with munich, carravienna, aromatic as the specialty grains. I used S-04 english ale yeast. Big hop bill as well....70 IBUS...OG - 1.065......racked to secondary last week and it was tasty. I am going to finish this one at about 1.020..a little residual sweetness to highlight the unique grain bill.

One thing about the english ale yeasts...they usually drop out below 62 deg.
 
Tons of commercial brewers use 1098 as their house yeast. It attenuates well, it attenuates fast, it flocculates well and it will ferment clean if you keep it cool, ~65. If you get up towards 68-70 you'll get a lot more of the fruitiness.
 
Good to know! I'm excited about the hop bill, just wanted something different for the yeast. Had 3 IPA's now with chico strain, and while delicious, I'm a flavor junkie. My taste buds must be terrible because I enjoy strong flavors; light flavors are lost on me, unless my palette is clear, or there are lots of light flavors compounding.
 
My hops direct delivery came Thursday, so I'm finally mashing this right now 1:48pm EST!
Pretty excited as the 8.25oz of hops for the boil sitting out has the whole house smelling amazing. I guess in 2 months I'll know if this was delicious or not.
 
Ended up dry hopping this 2 weeks ago. I ended up using 1oz Citra, 1oz Columbus & 1oz Saphir for dry hopping; as I decided I wanted to only have this flavor/aroma combo, so I could potentially tell what flavors/aromas these three can make in future brews.

5 days ago I crash cooled it and added gelatin. Bottled today (finished at 1.012) and it was delicious straight out of the fermenter. It was fruity/citrusy, honey colored and little bit of a sweetness from the honey malt. Really looking forward to cracking a carb'd bottle in a few weeks!
 

Latest posts

Back
Top