anotherbeerplease
Well-Known Member
Hey all
I want to brew a super high ABV dogfishhead inspired ale,
I've seen plenty of recipes online detailing exactly how to clone this beer, and they all include ridiculous amounts of dry hopping.
HOWEVER
This is a beer that "ages well" according to dogfish head. And it's a beer I'd like to drink slowly over 2-3+ years. Of course as a beer ages the hop aroma fades. So what exactly is the point of so much dry hopping? It seems to me you are just wasting beer in the fermenter, filling it with hop residue that will go to waste in a year or so, when you could skip the dry hop and enjoy more of this delicious beer!
Any ideas here? Why do they dry hop this so much, then tell us it "ages well"?
I want to brew a super high ABV dogfishhead inspired ale,
I've seen plenty of recipes online detailing exactly how to clone this beer, and they all include ridiculous amounts of dry hopping.
HOWEVER
This is a beer that "ages well" according to dogfish head. And it's a beer I'd like to drink slowly over 2-3+ years. Of course as a beer ages the hop aroma fades. So what exactly is the point of so much dry hopping? It seems to me you are just wasting beer in the fermenter, filling it with hop residue that will go to waste in a year or so, when you could skip the dry hop and enjoy more of this delicious beer!
Any ideas here? Why do they dry hop this so much, then tell us it "ages well"?