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hop tolerance - does your sensitivity to hops decrease after drinking a lot of ipas

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fluketamer

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do you build up a tolerance to hop oils like you build a tolerance to everything else?

6 months ago when i started making really hoppy ales they seemed more hoppy even though they had less hops in them. i thought it was my hops or maybe something in my process, but i think its my palate. my buddies are still saying the beers are very hoppy but i am always thinking i should have added another ounce of ________(fill in the blank) . i think we have had this discussion too before but anyone else notice they dull there palate after a while by drinking very hoppy ales?
 
I love ipas, most of what I drink are heavily hopped beers... but I also enjoy plenty of other styles as well, I'm brewing an oyster stout this weekend for instance... I think your palate may adjust to it a little sure. I do think that when I'm sharing beers I try to have them taste the ipas last because some of them are what I call palate crushers, meaning after you drink one you might not get the full flavor of the other beers.. but from one day to the next I don't know that overall sensitivity is decreased, I can still pick up hops in lightly hopped beers.
 
I sometimes wonder the same - changes over time? Tolerance or sensitivity?

For me, some hop styles are really "powerful" to me, like it don't take much. (Grapefruit forward hops as an example). Other hop styles - I can't get enough of. Saaz comes to mind - a 44 IBU on a lager is just delicious and not overpowering even though I use 4 oz in a 5 gal batch. Same with Cascade.... Never enough of it.

I'm guessing we all have different taste profiles, and yeah - it changes over time to. One always needs to adjust the target if you wanna hit your sweetest of sweet spots.
 
no i am not saying that the beer degrades over time i am saying that i think my ability to detect the flavors is muted after drinking a lot of hoppy beers. it seems to have carried over into the craft beers as well. they dont seem as hoppy to me. and i have nothing to do with their "process." if it was oxidation then the keg would get less flavorful over time. . i am saying a fresh keg today tastes less hoppy than a fresh keg several months ago. even tho its the same recipe. although i guess without the ability to taste the two kegs side by side it may just be bias.
 
Look up "lupulin shift"...
This.

In the 90's, nothing was hoppy enough for me. I look back at my old recipes and just shake my head. These days I brew between 1-3 batches of hoppy N. American ale/year and they are solar flare-like in their intensity because I don't wear them into the ground.
 

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