Total Hop Bill Below:
1 oz. Warrior Hops ( Soft-Bittering) with 30 minutes left in the boil.
2 oz. Amarillo Hops (Flavoring 1) with 15 minutes left in the boil.
2 oz. Nugget Hops (Flavoring 2) with 10 minutes left in the boil.
2 oz. Centennial (Finishing 1) with 5 minutes left in the boil.
Dry Hopping
1 oz. Columbus Hops
2 oz. Cascade Hops
1 oz Amarillo Hops
Full Recipe Below:
West Coast IPA
This West Coast IPA boasts unforgiving hop aggressiveness, but will cradle your taste buds with juicy hop flavor. The
exclusion of crystal malts sets this apart from its East Coast counterpart and promises a crisp, dry finish, creating a
lingering hop tongue-lashing.
Ingredients Statistics
8 lb. Canadian Light Liquid Malt Extract Original Gravity 1.074
2 lb Muntons Light DME Final Gravity 1.014
3/4 lb. Dingemann's Aromatic Malt* Alcohol Content 7.8%
1/4 lb. Weyermann Rye Malt*
1/4 lb. Flaked Wheat*
1 oz. Warrior Hops ( Soft-Bittering) with 30 minutes left in the boil.
2 oz. Amarillo Hops (Flavoring 1) with 15 minutes left in the boil.
2 oz. Nugget Hops (Flavoring 2) with 10 minutes left in the boil.
2 oz. Centennial (Finishing 1) with 5 minutes left in the boil.
1 oz. Columbus Hops (Finishing 2) with 2 minutes left in the boil.
2 oz. Cascade Hops (Finishing 3) with 0 minutes left in the boil.
1 oz Amarillo Hops (Dry Hop)
Mangrove Jack M44 West Coast Ale x2
14 Muslin Bags
5 oz Priming Sugar (for bottling)
* The malted grains are all crushed together in the clear plastic bag.
Procedure
A few hours before you begin to brew, prepare your liquid yeast according to the package instructions. We assume that you are
familiar with basic homebrewing techniques, so these procedures are abbreviated.
1. Divide the cracked grains among 3 of the muslin bags (approximately ½ pound per bag) and add them to your brew
kettle along with up to 2½ gallons of cold water. Heat slowly.
2. Steep the grains in hot water (about 145° – 160°F) to extract flavor and color – do not allow to boil. After about 30
minutes, remove the grain bags and then bring the water to a boil.
3. Remove the pot from the heat and add 4lbs of the liquid malt extract and the two bags of dried malt extract. Do not add
the other bag of liquid malt extract at this time. Keep the kettle off the burner and stir until the malt extract is
completely dissolved.
4. Put the pot back on the burner and bring to a boil. Once boiling, Set timer for 1 hour. After 30 minutes of boiling, place
bittering hops in 1 muslin bag (no more than 1 oz. per bag), add them to the pot.
5. After 40 minutes of boiling, remove the pot from the heat (you do not have to stop the timer) and add the second bag of
malt extract. Keep the kettle off the heat and stir until the extract is completely dissolved, then bring back to a boil.
6. After 45 minutes of boiling, add flavoring hops 1 (in a muslin bag, no more than 1 oz per bag). You may also ½ teaspoon
of Irish moss, or 1 Whirlfloc tablet, to help clarify beer (optional).
7. After 50 minutes of boiling, add flavoring hops 2 (in a muslin bag, no more than 1 oz per bag).
8. After 55 minutes of boiling, add finishing hops 1 (in a muslin bag, no more than 1 oz per bag).
9. After 58 minutes of boiling, add finishing hops 2 (in a muslin bag, no more than 1 oz per bag).
10. After 60 minutes of boiling, add finishing hops 3 (in a muslin bag, no more than 1 oz per bag). and turn off the heat. Put
a lid on your pot and cool it in an ice bath (use your sink) for about 30 minutes.
11. Pour 1 gallon of cold water into your sanitized fermenter, remove the hop bags from the kettle and add the cooled wort
(the stuff in your pot), and top up to 5 gallons. Aerate the wort with vigorous stirring, rocking the fermenter, etc.
12. Make sure the wort is below 80°F before adding yeast. Take a hydrometer reading if desired. Add the yeast to the wort.
13. Store the fermenter where the temperature will be a fairly constant 65° – 70°F. Once the vigorous phase of fermentation is
complete (typically 5 to 6 days), add the “dry hops”(no need to put them in a muslin bag). Allow the dry hops to soak for at
least and additional 5 days. Keep the beer in the primary fermenter until active fermentation is complete (no signs of active
fermentation for the last 2 to 3 days).
14. When ready to bottle, siphon beer into your sanitized bottling bucket, leaving sediment behind. Boil the priming sugar in
1-2 cups of water for a few minutes, gently stir into the beer, and bottle as usual.