paulster2626
Well-Known Member
I couldn't find amarillo either, and just subbed in some more simcoe and citra. It turned out great.
Hey Yoopers, kudos' for a great recipe. I have brewed the extract version twice with great thesuccess <hiccup> and now I want to give this a try for my first AG brew. My LHBS carries everything except TF Amber malt and I cannot find any online, either. So my question to you.. what would be a good substitution for the Fawcett Amber malt? Any assistance would be greatly appreciated.
I was interested in doing a partial mash. I have only done extract previously.
I was wondering if this looked close or if I could get some input (the actual hop additions would be gradual of course): http://hopville.com/recipe/1575260/american-ipa-recipes/fogdish-foot
Thanks!
buildzit said:Any thoughts on using a WY2565 Kolsch. Have it sitting around from a BierMuncher Kona pale ale.
Chug said:Whew! Turns out that "continuous hopping" is a bit of work! I was pretty diligent about it though, spreading the hop additions perfectly throughout the entire boil, throwing them in every 45 seconds or so. I have a good feeling about this one, it'll be worth it.
Just throw them in the pimary after 2 or three weeks.
Primary two weeks, throw loose hops in primary at let sit for 7-10 days. If you can, cold crash for a day or two to help the hops floating around sink to the bottom. When you rack the beer to your bottling bucket or keg fasten a hop bag or 1 gallon paint strainer bag with a rubberband or zip tie around the end of the racking cane. This will help reduce the amount of hops/ trub from ending up in your final product.
shawnleary said:awesome! thanks everyone. Putting in another container for a week seemed pointless and risked introducing more brain eating amoebas.
D_Nyholm said:Personally, I put them in a 1 gallon paint strained bag or muslin bag so I don't have to worry about excess hops floating around.
That's fine if using a bucket but I don't recommend more than an ounce if you plan on getting them back out through the neck of a carboy.
I wouldn't use crystal malt- I'd stick with amber malt if you can possibly get it. If not, victory or biscuit malt would be a better choice than the cara- malts. Cara-amber especially- it's a bit stronger/darker than crystal 60L.
I don't really like marris otter in most American style IPAs (with the exception possibly of Surly Furious, which uses Golden Promise but it's similar). I'd go with US or Canadian two-row for the base malt. If you want more malt backbone, you could try Munich malt (say a pound or two) with the US two-row.