i realize this sounds a bit bizarre and definitely not standard practice. but i made a beer twice recently, and both times i got less than great results from my hop schedule. there's only one ingredient change- i used some cryo hops this time, and older/original brews were just pellets.
so long story short, in an attempt to figure out the issue, i looked back at notes. it seems more than a few times i dry hopped for like 4-7 days, crashed, and then got busy/distracted, etc and let it sit there- crashed around 35F - on the hops for another 3-5-7 days.
so from what i can tell the only real difference was the long cold dry hop. technically it could be the cryo hops, but ive never really heard complaints about them so ive just sort of dismissed that. which leaves the long cold aging on hops.
anybody else experienced this, or doing it on purpose and getting good hop presence?
so long story short, in an attempt to figure out the issue, i looked back at notes. it seems more than a few times i dry hopped for like 4-7 days, crashed, and then got busy/distracted, etc and let it sit there- crashed around 35F - on the hops for another 3-5-7 days.
so from what i can tell the only real difference was the long cold dry hop. technically it could be the cryo hops, but ive never really heard complaints about them so ive just sort of dismissed that. which leaves the long cold aging on hops.
anybody else experienced this, or doing it on purpose and getting good hop presence?