philrose
Well-Known Member
Bittering without alpha ratings for hops is unpredictable, especially on the typically high alpha varieties like magnum.
You can give it a go, but you can't really guess at the results. Might be a sweet, unbalanced beer or a puckeringly bitter beer. This recipe is fairly light on the hop budget, seems rational to me to pick up some other hop for bittering.
If you're looking for a good use for those magnums, IIRC Sierra Nevada mixes them with citras as a dry hop for their torpedo ipa. This is less dependent on the alpha acid ratings that homegrown hops lack.
But hey, for all I know, you could have dialed into those hops with some method I don't even know about or sent them for testing or something. So I might just be an ass.
You can give it a go, but you can't really guess at the results. Might be a sweet, unbalanced beer or a puckeringly bitter beer. This recipe is fairly light on the hop budget, seems rational to me to pick up some other hop for bittering.
If you're looking for a good use for those magnums, IIRC Sierra Nevada mixes them with citras as a dry hop for their torpedo ipa. This is less dependent on the alpha acid ratings that homegrown hops lack.
But hey, for all I know, you could have dialed into those hops with some method I don't even know about or sent them for testing or something. So I might just be an ass.