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My og was 1.049. With fg slightly below 1.001 i got 6.2% and it drank great. No booze to speak of.
I've successfully brewed 2 Brut IPA's, both with similar OG's around 1.057 and both finished with identical FG's of .997. Doing the math, both beers are pushing nearly 8% alcohol.
I think I must have a sensitive palate to this high alcohol content because I sense an alcohol harshness in the beer. The hops are well controlled and very appealing, and the last beer I used Sterling and Vic Secret. The IBU's on paper was something like 33, but the hop presence was pronounced compared to the actual IBU number. I don't think the sharpness/harshness of this beer is coming from the hops, I think it is from the high alcohol content.
Has anyone else considered cutting the grain bill to get a starting OG of maybe 1.040? If my numbers hold true and the FG drops to .997, now we are talking about a 5.6% ABV beer which I consider in my normal range. Since I see lots of brewers reporting FG around the same as mine (1.057), has anyone scaled back the grain bill to get an OG of 1.040 or similar??
I put beano in a stuck beer once, and add more yeast. It started again. Got almost down to my intended gravity. It was a long time ago so i dont remember the numbers.Have you guys read the brulosophy post about using Beano to get FG down? I might try it with a brut, my last ipa got down to 1.007 just with us-05 and low mash temp. I don’t need it to get down to .996, I would be happy with 1.002 (seems plenty dry to me). I’ll report back
My batch was grain to glass in 11 days.What the normal turn around on these? Is it a week like NEIPAs or doesn’t it benefit from longer ferment times?
My batch was grain to glass in 11 days.
Don't know about normal, but mine took eleven days.What the normal turn around on these? Is it a week like NEIPAs or doesn’t it benefit from longer ferment times?
Currently brewingmy Sauvignon Blanc Brut IPA.
86% Pilsner
7% acidulated for pH
7% acidulated in the sparge for some minor tartness.
Hopping with Nelson Sauvin using the social kitchen schedule.
15g @15
100g @0mins
Yeast is imperial yeast suburban Brett.
Will dryhop with 200g of Nelson Sauvin
And then keg with 250-375ml of my favourite NZ Sauvignon Blanc (Torlesse, which is local to me).
1.056 going into the FV.
Hoping the Brettanomyces will get it nice and low as I mashed at 63/64 C. While adding a nice fruitiness to compliment the wine and hops. It'll be entered into the national HBC here in NZ. Fingers Crossed.
can't wait to hear how this one tastesI brewed up my first Brut IPA this weekend, FG at 1.046 (85% Pilsner, 15% Flakes corn) so that my ABV doesn’t go north of 6%.
Used OYL-091 (Hornindal Kveik) at 93F and the beer was literally done (like 0.996 per the Tilt) less than 24 hr post pitch! I’m guessing the high temp helped the glucoamylase work super fast as well.
Went with 25 IBUs with Citra, Mosaic and El Dorado. Dry hopping with 8 oz (even blend) tonight, after temp drops to 75F.
I've not brewed one of these yet, but I would guess that the style doesn't lend itself to huge ABVs, I'd certainly cut it down to no more than 6% as a target, probably less.
I am interested. My first reaction when I looked at this was that very high ABV could be the go. I was thinking of dry white and sparkling wines which are all typically up around 12% somewhere. That said I am no fan of big beers in general. I much prefer to keep everything well below 6%, but I realise I am pretty much on my own there! Do you have some particular logic for your comment or is it just your feeling for what you'd like to drink?
Nice! Dropped 50 points in about 18 hours.I brewed up my first Brut IPA this weekend, FG at 1.046 (85% Pilsner, 15% Flakes corn) so that my ABV doesn’t go north of 6%.
Used OYL-091 (Hornindal Kveik) at 93F and the beer was literally done (like 0.996 per the Tilt) less than 24 hr post pitch! I’m guessing the high temp helped the glucoamylase work super fast as well.
Went with 25 IBUs with Citra, Mosaic and El Dorado. Dry hopping with 8 oz (even blend) tonight, after temp drops to 75F.
Brewing this tomorrow:
For 10 gallons:
.25 lbs Acid malt
1 lb Wheat malt
20.5 lbs Pale Malt
Mash in and 120 and slowing ramp up to 148 for 60 minutes. Mash out at 168.
1oz Citra for 75 minutes
1oz Loral cryo hops, 1oz Amarillo, and 1oz Citra whirlpool
Safale US-05 for primary ferment
Add Amylo 300 after 7 days
2oz Citra and 2oz Amarillo dry-hop
Shooting for OG 1.060 and FG .997 for 8.2% abv (so an Imperial Brut IPA)
Do y'all think that is enough hops?
What's the reason for waiting 7 days to add the Amylo 300?Brewing this tomorrow:
For 10 gallons:
.25 lbs Acid malt
1 lb Wheat malt
20.5 lbs Pale Malt
Mash in and 120 and slowing ramp up to 148 for 60 minutes. Mash out at 168.
1oz Citra for 75 minutes
1oz Loral cryo hops, 1oz Amarillo, and 1oz Citra whirlpool
Safale US-05 for primary ferment
Add Amylo 300 after 7 days
2oz Citra and 2oz Amarillo dry-hop
Shooting for OG 1.060 and FG .997 for 8.2% abv (so an Imperial Brut IPA)
Do y'all think that is enough hops?
What's the reason for waiting 7 days to add the Amylo 300?
Yeah, if you want to see the FG delta, and are willing to wait the extra time for fermentation, then adding at first FG is a valid reason. I'm not aware of any technical benefits to adding the enzyme late however. I added at pitch, and am very happy with the results.I am interested in that too because I did exactly the same thing on my first and only play with these enzymes and had absolutely no good reason for doing it at all! It just 'felt right' to let the yeast do it's thing on the ordinary wort first. It is fun to get a gravity reading of the FG without enzyme and then add it to see how much it drops.