So I have been brewing for around 2 years and fairly active on this site (some posts for the better and some for worse
). I have brewed many tasty brews and some that scored very well and made it in the finals in local comps (I have one in the finals of a local comp, the winner to be announced Sunday, so I'll let you know how it goes). I love IPA and IIPA's. I would like to think I follow recipes well, however, it seems like my IPA and IIPA's always fall short of my expectations, even with popular clone recipes or ones I tweak a little and have yet to make a IPA or IIPA I am super happy with. FYI- I keg (and always purge several times before pressurizing). The dry-hop dissipates within a few days and my bitterness seems to always be under where I estimate it using Beersmith. The hops I use are all whole leaf, same year, stored in vacuum bags in my freezer (15 lbs this year -- thanks Hopsdirect!!). I have added gypsum, calcium chloride and/or acids to previous mashes to try to sharpen and accentuate the hops, but to no avail. I've even pressurized my dry-hopping hops with co2 and purged them with co2 before adding to 2ndary and it doesn't seem to help.
Taking a somewhat scientific approach to eliminate unknows, I can tell something has to change in my process and my thoughts to make improvements are this:
1) get a ph meter and monitor the ph level of the mash and boil closely - adjusting as necessary (maintain mash 5.3-5.5, prop shoot for mash ph of 5.4)
2) send water samples in to be analyzed - so proper h2o mods can be made
3) get a conical to ensure no oxidation is happening between 2nd and keg
obviously on 1 and 2 above, adding water modifiers doesn't really do much good unless you know where you're starting (although I use the local water report as a guideline). if anyone has suggestions or had an epiphany going through the same thing, let 'her rip. I'll be ordering 1 and sending in 2 within the next week. Come hell or high water (not a 21A IPA rip-off) I will make a great IPA and IIPA, just may take me a while to figure it out.

Taking a somewhat scientific approach to eliminate unknows, I can tell something has to change in my process and my thoughts to make improvements are this:
1) get a ph meter and monitor the ph level of the mash and boil closely - adjusting as necessary (maintain mash 5.3-5.5, prop shoot for mash ph of 5.4)
2) send water samples in to be analyzed - so proper h2o mods can be made
3) get a conical to ensure no oxidation is happening between 2nd and keg
obviously on 1 and 2 above, adding water modifiers doesn't really do much good unless you know where you're starting (although I use the local water report as a guideline). if anyone has suggestions or had an epiphany going through the same thing, let 'her rip. I'll be ordering 1 and sending in 2 within the next week. Come hell or high water (not a 21A IPA rip-off) I will make a great IPA and IIPA, just may take me a while to figure it out.