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How to keep Hazy/NE IPAs tasting fresh?

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dogjam

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Hello all,

I've been brewing some very tasty hazy/New England IPAs for a few months now, but they always seem to diminish in tastiness very quickly, within just a few weeks.

Any recommendations for keeping these bad boys fresh-tasting for longer? I ferment in a Grainfather conical and transfer into a keg using gravity, so I know CO2 pressure transfers would help minimize oxygen exposure.

Any other tips or tricks? Thanks in advance for any advice!
DJ
 
Oxygen reduction at all levels. The amount of brown tinged crappy commercial craft NEIPAs out there is testament to the requirement for low oxygen.
 
I keg condition all my beers for just this, (reduction of O2). I use 100g of pure cane juice sugar and 300ml of water in the wave for ~2 min. Put 20 psi CO2 on it then disconnect and sit in ambient for 2 wks, chill and serve, or lager for non hoppy ones.
 
Wondering what flavors you define as "fresh". Are your beers staying hazy? I have had some issues with my hazy beers dropping clear and some of that intense hoppy flavors dropping along in the process. I feel like I do many of the things that should cause "permanent haze".

With my latest batch, I noticed that my beer fridge was still down at 35F from reducing the temps when I had some lagers on tap recently. I read another story of somebody saying that when they reduced the temp in their kegerator down to 34F their NEIPA dropped clear. I moved the temp back up, but I think my beer fridge is always below 40F.

My goal is not haze, but there does seem to be some synergy between proteins and hop oils in suspension that drives hoppy flavors and the flavors/mouthfeel of the style.
 
Wondering what flavors you define as "fresh". Are your beers staying hazy? I have had some issues with my hazy beers dropping clear and some of that intense hoppy flavors dropping along in the process. I feel like I do many of the things that should cause "permanent haze".

With my latest batch, I noticed that my beer fridge was still down at 35F from reducing the temps when I had some lagers on tap recently. I read another story of somebody saying that when they reduced the temp in their kegerator down to 34F their NEIPA dropped clear. I moved the temp back up, but I think my beer fridge is always below 40F.

My goal is not haze, but there does seem to be some synergy between proteins and hop oils in suspension that drives hoppy flavors and the flavors/mouthfeel of the style.

recipe? I’ve never had a problem with consistent haze and my keezer is set at 36
 
recipe? I’ve never had a problem with consistent haze and my keezer is set at 36

These were probably not the best NEIPA example recipes. I was playing around with some 2.5 gal batches of extract based NEIPA to brew small batches and try out hop combos or maybe different yeasts. What I recall for each 2.5 gal batch was: 3 lbs Pilsner DME, 1 lb Wheat DME, 4 oz Golden Naked Oats steeped, (10 min boil with no boil hops), 3 oz hops at flameout, 3 oz hops dry hop, S-04 yeast. I felt there was enough stuff in there to keep the haze better. The beers started out quite tasty, but the intense hop flavors faded as they settled over a month.
 
Hello all,

I've been brewing some very tasty hazy/New England IPAs for a few months now, but they always seem to diminish in tastiness very quickly, within just a few weeks.

Any recommendations for keeping these bad boys fresh-tasting for longer? I ferment in a Grainfather conical and transfer into a keg using gravity, so I know CO2 pressure transfers would help minimize oxygen exposure.

Any other tips or tricks? Thanks in advance for any advice!
DJ
What do you do to eliminate the o2 in the keg before racking to it?
 
Ferment in the keg and serve from the same keg. Best thing I've done for my IPA's. After a month or two they still taste great and look amazing. I only dry hop one time and I suspend the hops in a hop canister a few inches into the liquid. You can purge the keg with CO2 when you open it to dry hop and it only takes a few seconds. I never open my keg again because I use a floating dip tube to serve the beer. I guess you could also close transfer to another keg if you wanted to, but I've even stopped doing that.
 
Ferment in the keg and serve from the same keg. Best thing I've done for my IPA's. After a month or two they still taste great and look amazing. I only dry hop one time and I suspend the hops in a hop canister a few inches into the liquid. You can purge the keg with CO2 when you open it to dry hop and it only takes a few seconds. I never open my keg again because I use a floating dip tube to serve the beer. I guess you could also close transfer to another keg if you wanted to, but I've even stopped doing that.
I’m sure that works form minimizing o2 but I personally would never keep a beer on trub or hops that long ever.
 
Hello all,

I've been brewing some very tasty hazy/New England IPAs for a few months now, but they always seem to diminish in tastiness very quickly, within just a few weeks.

Any recommendations for keeping these bad boys fresh-tasting for longer? I ferment in a Grainfather conical and transfer into a keg using gravity, so I know CO2 pressure transfers would help minimize oxygen exposure.

Any other tips or tricks? Thanks in advance for any advice!
DJ
If you have time to read through the last 50 or so pages you will be more that happy you did. This is probably the most comprehensive and experience driven advice and techniques on the style https://www.homebrewtalk.com/forum/threads/northeast-style-ipa.568046/page-253#post-8704063
 
I’m sure that works form minimizing o2 but I personally would never keep a beer on trub or hops that long ever.
It doesn't stay on hops as I suspend the canister in the keg. You drink it off the hops in a few glasses. I've closed transferred to a purged keg many times, but found it not necessary lately. I can taste no ill effects from staying on the yeast a couple months. To each his own of course.
 
My last two beers were done this way, one of which was probably my best ever, though it was with San Diego super. The New England I did in this manner used imperial voyager and it was pretty meh, though I believe that to be the esters totally overpowering everything. Required an unplanned second dry hop a week or two in, no issues with that either
 
I keg condition all my beers for just this, (reduction of O2). I use 100g of pure cane juice sugar and 300ml of water in the wave for ~2 min. Put 20 psi CO2 on it then disconnect and sit in ambient for 2 wks, chill and serve, or lager for non hoppy ones.

That is an excellent idea. The yeast will scavenge the oxygen and you save on CO2 for carbonation.
 
I’m sure that works form minimizing o2 but I personally would never keep a beer on trub or hops that long ever.
My IPAs I do a near zero O2 transfer from fermentor to a CO2 purged keg putting my dry hops in a fine mesh nylon bag floating right in the keg. I don't hang it and let it ride until the keg kicks. My IPAs reach their juiciest about 2-3 month post kegging. I just kicked my last NEIPA keg after 6 months and it was still nice and juicy. No grassy or vegetal flavors at all. O2 is what turns IPAs dank and bitter quickly.
 
My IPAs I do a near zero O2 transfer from fermentor to a CO2 purged keg putting my dry hops in a fine mesh nylon bag floating right in the keg. I don't hang it and let it ride until the keg kicks. My IPAs reach their juiciest about 2-3 month post kegging. I just kicked my last NEIPA keg after 6 months and it was still nice and juicy. No grassy or vegetal flavors at all. O2 is what turns IPAs dank and bitter quickly.
O2 pick up or ingest will have nothing to do with dankness or bitterness in your overall flavor. Dankness is a natural hop profile for some varieties such columbus, summit, Apollo(there are plenty others, even citra and Mosiac can be dank depending on the lot) and bitterness comes from alpha acid isomerization.

Oxidation affects would be stale hop flavors and aromas, sweetness/cider/caramel notes, and cardboard and even paint thinner notes.

I’m very surprised you think your beers hit their juiciest after 2/3 months. I’d agree if you said 2/3 weeks but my beers never get better after a month, they do change quite a bit depending on the hop combo
 
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I'm going to agree w/Dgallo. I try an consume NEIPA's fairly quickly, like within 1 month but sometimes it last longer.
For instance i brewed one on 10/19 and it still taste fresh and the color hasnt changed. It's just about gone but for me the key is kegging. I started out brewing this style 4 yrs ago (before i started kegging) and every batch became oxidized. After about 4 weeks of bottling the color changed as did the taste. It wasnt so bad that i needed to dump the batch but the beer wasnt as good as fresh.
So i stopped brewing the style until i started kegging and it all changed. The only time my beer sees oxygen is when i dry hop. Other than that no oxygen. Of course it sees O2 during the brewing process but so far that hasnt effected the outcome.
 
O2 pick up or ingest will have nothing to do with dankness or bitterness in your overall flavor. Dankness is a natural hop profile for some varieties such columbus, summit, Apollo(there are plenty others, even citra and Mosiac can be dank depending on the lot) and bitterness comes from alpha acid isomerization.

Oxidation affects would be stale hop flavors and aromas, sweetness/cider/caramel notes, and cardboard and even paint thinner notes.

I’m very surprised you think your beers hit their juiciest after 2/3 months. I’d agree if you said 2/3 weeks but my beers never get better after a month, they do change quite a bit depending on the hop combo

You are correct that O2 doesn’t change absolute dankness but I could envision oxidation of the hops changing to less than desirable flavors is affecting overall flavor profile. My previous post is based on mine and others observations over several several kegs of IPAs and dry hopping this way. The flavors continue to improve well past the day I keg. I could also envision the hops staying in contact with the beer for the life of the kegged batch sans O2 is allowing longer time for hop flavors and aromas to further interact with the beer and even the yeast still in suspension. I did not have this same experience before minimizing O2 exposure during packaging.
 
I have fermented and served in the same keg, fermented in keg and closed transfer to a serving keg, and fermented in a better bottle and transferred open air to a serving keg.

...and I couldn't tell a difference between any of them. My 2 cents. I've only brewed 6-7 NEIPA though.
 
What is the atmosphere comprised of on your planet? :D

That New England IPAs are highly susceptible to post-fermentation oxygen exposure is not subject to debate...

Cheers!
 
What is the atmosphere comprised of on your planet? :D

That New England IPAs are highly susceptible to post-fermentation oxygen exposure is not subject to debate...

Cheers!
Not subject to debate? Bold statement my friend.

I don't know where truth is, but I disagree with the notion that seems generally accepted around here, that somehow NEIPA reacts to oxygen vastly different than every other beer.

I'm open to hearing your case - but let's not read too much into Brulosophy or Janish. I think they are interesting data points, but they're not going to prove the subject is solved and closed.
 
In all seriousness, how long should a hazy IPA remain in perfect drinking condition if all precautions (within reason) are taken?
Edit: Coming from a point of trying to learn: wouldn't spunding solve a whole lot of issues?
 
Not subject to debate? Bold statement my friend.

I don't know where truth is, but I disagree with the notion that seems generally accepted around here, that somehow NEIPA reacts to oxygen vastly different than every other beer.

I'm open to hearing your case - but let's not read too much into Brulosophy or Janish. I think they are interesting data points, but they're not going to prove the subject is solved and closed.
It’s not a bold statement by any means, he is correct. There is no debate at all with heavily hopped beers, especially NEIPA, are EXTREMELY susceptible to oxidation. Shellhammer, Janish, have done plenty of scientific studies on this topic and are vast anecdotal evidence from home brewers and well known breweries alike. It’s a real issue and you need to prevent post fermentation oxidation at all cost to have a solid NEIPA
 
Ok, well I disagree. There is a 'consensus' of vocal people on brewing websites saying it is so. These are the same people, more or less, who have insisted on the critical importance of secondary fermentation, liquid yeast's superiority to dry, or any of the other dozens of things that homebrewers decide than undecide over time.

There is no science that shows this. I'd be interested to read the Shellhammer and Janish bits that suggest it, but let's be real - it isn't science.

My personal experience is that my NEIPAs that I've open transferred vs closed transferred vs fermented/served in the same keg, all taste basically the same. I'm only one guy, and I haven't brewed a zillion NEIPAS, but I've been brewing for 15 years and am not a total beer troglodyte.

Maybe NEIPA behaves the exact same as every other beer? Maybe oxidation isn't perceptible unless certain factors are involved? Maybe I'm full of crap? Maybe the online consensus of NEIPAs being super susceptible to oxidation is full of crap?
 
Pour a light lager into a glass, then pour a hazy ipa into a glass.
Wait 48 hours then do the eye, nose and taste test. I assure you the heavily hopped hazy will have deviated far more than the lager.

Another thing for the op to consider when keeping hoppy beer in a keg for an extended period of time is ingress through your lines. Regardless of purging processes, you will definitely be introducing O2 through your serving line as well as gas line. Thankfully there are O2 reducing lines that can help
 
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Ok, well I disagree. There is a 'consensus' of vocal people on brewing websites saying it is so. These are the same people, more or less, who have insisted on the critical importance of secondary fermentation, liquid yeast's superiority to dry, or any of the other dozens of things that homebrewers decide than undecide over time.

There is no science that shows this. I'd be interested to read the Shellhammer and Janish bits that suggest it, but let's be real - it isn't science.

My personal experience is that my NEIPAs that I've open transferred vs closed transferred vs fermented/served in the same keg, all taste basically the same. I'm only one guy, and I haven't brewed a zillion NEIPAS, but I've been brewing for 15 years and am not a total beer troglodyte.

Maybe NEIPA behaves the exact same as every other beer? Maybe oxidation isn't perceptible unless certain factors are involved? Maybe I'm full of crap? Maybe the online consensus of NEIPAs being super susceptible to oxidation is full of crap?
I’m not doubting your experience but You are incorrect here.

So you don’t think your just taking advice from a hber..... ready away.
https://www.homebrewersassociation.org/how-to-brew/impact-cold-side-oxidation-new-england-ipa/

http://scottjanish.com/headspace-hazy-ipa-oxidation/

http://brulosophy.com/2017/09/11/the-impact-of-cold-side-oxidation-on-new-england-ipa-exbeeriment-results/

https://www.google.com/amp/s/beerandbrewing.com/amp/avoiding-oxidation

https://companyweek.com/articles/the-tricky-task-of-canning-hazy-ipas
 
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