iijakii
Well-Known Member
IPAs need to be ridiculous, dry and bitter. Can't stand IPAs that are anywhere near sweet, which is most of the east-coast ones I have tried., and frankly a lot of west coast ones too.
IPAs need to be ridiculous, dry and bitter. Can't stand IPAs that are anywhere near sweet, which is most of the east-coast ones I have tried., and frankly a lot of west coast ones too.
IPAs need to be ridiculous, dry and bitter. Can't stand IPAs that are anywhere near sweet, which is most of the east-coast ones I have tried., and frankly a lot of west coast ones too.
Well you need the crystal and a high mash temp. You want it to have body, of course. An FG of around 1.020 is perfect.But then how am I supposed to fit this 2lbs of crystal into it?
Plus, who puts sugar into their beers? Thats going to make it cidery
East coast beers would be AMAZING, if you could get them on the WEST coast. You know why its so hard to get a good East coast IPA on the WEST coast? THEY DONT SEND THEM TO US..Ya want to know why? WE HAVE PLINY! Nuff said..LOL Just kidding really. well, sort of.....
I actually do like a lot of the East coast IPAs I have tried but I am not a palette wrecking IPA kind of guy..So it only goes to reason.
Funny OP brother! I like your style.
Cheers
Jay
I have been thinking about this...
Lawson's contracts out to Two Roads Brewing here in CT to locally produce Sip of Sunshine. Why couldn't others do the same? John Kimmich (Alchemist) and Vinnie Cilurzo (Russian River) develop some gentleman's agreement so that there would be wider distribution of both?
As much as I love HT, I would really like to try Supplication and I don't want to support the resale market. A friend of mine scored $300 worth of Cantillon in Brussels for a case of HT...surely there's some way for these indie guys to get better distribution.