I'm brewing a saison tomorrow and have some spare room in the kettle so I thought it might be cool to split the batch and do a Belgian-style IPA.
The grain bill will be pils with a splash of wheat and maybe a tiny amount of caramunich or aromatic. I was thinking I could pull the first runnings for the IPA and use the rest for the saison, doing 2 boils. Maybe a bit of sugar or candi sugar too.
I'm not sure how the yeast works with the hops on this style though. Normally with yeast-dominant styles I go for clean bittering and no late additions. I'm thinking of doing a bittering addition then hitting it with some combination of Tettnang / Motueka / Crystal at 10 mins and whirlpool. Then a dryhop later on. I only have WLP500 yeast available, so hoping this would be suitable.
Do I ferment on the cool side to keep the esters under control or warmer so they don't get masked by hop flavours? Do I hold back on the hop additions a bit, compared with an American IPA?
The grain bill will be pils with a splash of wheat and maybe a tiny amount of caramunich or aromatic. I was thinking I could pull the first runnings for the IPA and use the rest for the saison, doing 2 boils. Maybe a bit of sugar or candi sugar too.
I'm not sure how the yeast works with the hops on this style though. Normally with yeast-dominant styles I go for clean bittering and no late additions. I'm thinking of doing a bittering addition then hitting it with some combination of Tettnang / Motueka / Crystal at 10 mins and whirlpool. Then a dryhop later on. I only have WLP500 yeast available, so hoping this would be suitable.
Do I ferment on the cool side to keep the esters under control or warmer so they don't get masked by hop flavours? Do I hold back on the hop additions a bit, compared with an American IPA?