DFH 60 Minute is hoppy more in the sense of bitterness than it is in knocking you in the face with hop aroma and wrecking your palate with hop flavor like West Coast IPAs do. Since East Coast IPAs are American IPAs that are more akin to their British counterparts instead of their West Coast counterparts I am surprised many outside of the region (that is the Northeast/Mid-Atlantic) actually like this beer as an IPA. Next to Boh (National Bohemian) and Yuengling, you can get DFH 60 Minute practically everywhere around here (Maryland), even at VFWs. It is my go-to beer.I bottled my batch today. It tasted good however it lacked the umff of an IPA and hoppy aroma. Will this come out as it ages?
I just brewed this tonight for my second all grain home brew (maybe my 10th home brew to date, but just switched to all grain a few months ago). I can't wait!
After reading through posts here, I did make some changes:
1. Went down to 11 lbs of 2-row instead of the original 13 lbs.
2. Had to use Crisp Amber since my LHBS did not have Fawcett.
3. Used WLP001 - California Ale yeast.
4. Somewhat continuous hop with the warrior for the first 35 minutes, then combined the simcoe and amarillo for later additions -- 15/10/5/0 and a hop stand for 20 mins at 175 F. Dry hop won't change.
OG was 1.055. Really looking forward to this one!
Ignore it. The smell of fermentation is NOT the smell of beer.
Ignore it. The smell of fermentation is NOT the smell of beer.
I have a gift card to a "diy beer" website that only sells extracts and kits. Normally I all-grain brew so this will be my first extract.
Can anyone tell me if the "Dry Malt Extract" referred to in the recipe is the same as any of these:
Cooper's Amber Malt Extract
Cooper's Dark Malt Extract
Cooper's Light Malt Extract
As these are my only options and I want to make 10 gallons is there any combination of these that will work? They come in 3.3 lb cans.
Once it has cleared up a bit, I'll be doing a side-by-side and will post the results.
Hi Yooper,
Just to be clear, the hop schedule for your "House IPA" version of this is all the bittering @60m then the rest are evenly distributed at 15-10-5-0?
Thanks for all your efforts!
So here is my question... (for Yooper or Yuri, or whomever....)
A friend of mine is coming up to visit me on November 1st (National Learn to Homebrew Day).
His original reason for visiting was because he got a taste of Hill Farmstead "Edward" this summer and since I live 20 minutes from the brewery, he was coming to do the brewery thing with me.
(oddly, the 20 minute drive is GREATLY surpassed by the nearly 2 hour wait in line all 3 times that I have gone)
Since this is such a glorious holiday (should be)... we decided to do an extract batch of beer that he can take home with him as his first fermenting beverage (we have coined the term: his holiday "prize")
I usually brew AG and did not want to complicate the day, so opted to simply do 2 extract brews (K.I.S.S).
This way we can enjoy homebrew and the Edward and not have the stress of a lot of lifting and thinking... etc... (sounds like a good plan to me)
So, since the extract version of this is partial boil at 2.5 gallons, can I make this alteration?
Make it a 5 gal boil (probably 6 pre-boil to account for evaporation)
Double up on every ingredient and then split the chilled wort between 2 buckets and then top off to 5 gal each?
Plan on building up a HUGE starter of washed 1056 about a week in advance and then split it between the batches (or 1056 in one and Notty in the other)
Does this all sound legit?![]()
Yoop,
Your house IPA looks right up my ally. My LHBS (Bell's) only has Munton's Amber, which has a lovibond of 2. I saw earlier in the thread that you thought that there wasn't too much difference between Munton's and Fawcett, but would you recommend adding some caramel 20 or 40 to compensate for the color? Like a half pound or so? Honestly, I'm more interested in getting the taste right than matching the color.
I brewed your oatmeal stout a couple weeks ago and it's awesome, BTW. Thanks for the recipe.