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How to lose the syrupy in a IIPA

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Rekatsifu

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Jun 2, 2012
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Location
Long Beach
Hi Guys,

I recently brewed a great IIPA, but some judges thought the mouthfeel was a bit too syrupy. They still liked, but I would like to tweek the recipe a bit to lose some of the syrupiness.

I have contemplated increasing the bittering hops and read something about dried rice extract, but am kinda unsure about DRE.

OG 1.083
SG 1.013
9.3% ABV
9.75 oz hops = 73 IBU
IBU/SG Ratio = 0.814
SRM 11.3

10lbs Light Dry Extract
9.6 oz Cara-pils
9.6 oz Crystal 40
1 lb Corn Sugar

60 - 0.5 oz Colombus
45 - 1 oz Colombus
30 - 1 oz Simcoe
0 - 1.5 oz Citra
0 - 1.5 oz Simcoe
0 - 0.5 oz Colombus

2 pkgs Safale American Ale Yeast

DH 8 Days 1 oz each Citra, Simcoe, Centennial
DH 4 Days 0.25 oz each Citra, Simcoe, Centennial

Thanks
 
I agree dme won't attenuate like an all grain recipe will. I wouldn't even use crystal. Lose the Carapils and lower the crystal and up the sugar to dry it out.
 
Okay, great suggestions. The more sugar I add, the less light dry extract I use, right? What do you think about 8.5 lbs LDE and 2 lbs Corn sugar? It keeps things relatively the same with my EST OG and EST ABV and lowers my EST SG from 1.016 to 1.011.
 
For an extract based recipe, I would say the safe zone for adding sugar while still tasting like a beer is between 10-15% of the total recipe. I've done plenty of beers at the typical 5-6% Pliny the Elder rate, but that beer is lowly mashed all-grain beer with a huge yeast starter, so 5-6% sugar works there, but it hardly makes a dent in an extract recipe. The important thing to remember is that sugar replaces the extract...you can't just add sugar to an existing recipe to aid dryness.

I would use no carapils, only Extra light DME, and about 3-6% crystal...the lighter the better.

You might want to work on your hop schedule too. Your current 0 and DH hop rate is quite high. I would do a small 60 min addition, followed by a small 30 min addition, then pound it late (smartly so) at 15, 10, 5, 0, DH. If you want more pine and less citrus/tropical, then only use Simcoe in the dryhop. If you want the reverse, then use Citra/Centennial in the dryhop.
 
Alright, new plan.......

EST OG 1.085
EST SG 1.013
EST 9.5% ABV
11.25 oz hops = 93.5 EST IBU
EST IBU/SG Ratio = 1.106
EST SRM 8.9

6 lbs Light Dry Extract
3 lbs Extra Light Dry Extract
8 oz Crystal 40
1.5 lbs Corn Sugar

60 - 0.5 oz Colombus
30 - 0.5 oz Colombus
30 - 0.25 oz Simcoe
30 - 0.25 oz Citra
15 - 0.75 oz Simcoe
15 - 0.75 oz Citra
10 - 0.75 oz Simcoe
10 - 0.75 oz Citra
5 - 0.75 oz Simcoe
5 - 0.75 oz Citra
0 - 0.75 oz Citra
0 - 0.75 oz Simcoe

2 pkgs Safale American Ale Yeast

DH 8 Days 1 oz each Citra, Simcoe, Centennial
DH 4 Days 0.25 oz each Citra, Simcoe, Centennial

I think this may do it.
 
Looks pretty slammin if you get it to attenuate that low. Keep us posted.

PS - Add all of the Light dry extract and corn sugar late in the boil. Add the Extra light extract at the start of the boil.
 
You can safely replace another .5# of dme with corn sugar and throw the carapils down to 4oz.

I'd suggest doing 1 modification at a time in order to know what did what.
 
Took a little taste when I measured and added the second dry hops yesterday and I made it down to 1.012. Cold crashing and carbing over the next 5 or so days. This one was a bit more hoppy, not as much malt, which was the goal. Only a carbed pint will have the final say. I am thinking I will probably go back to my original recipe though. Thanks for the input guys.
 
passedpawn said:
Don't use corn sugar. No point. Table sugar gets you exactly the same thing. Use 10% less than the corn sugar.

+1, good ol' C+H goes into every IPA I make. I add it in at about 20 minutes.
 
Some people would argue that corn sugar (glucose) is easier for the yeast to eat, resulting it a better quality beer, than one which used sucrose.
 
Some people would argue that corn sugar (glucose) is easier for the yeast to eat, resulting it a better quality beer, than one which used sucrose.

Would the sucrose invert in the boil? Or is the pH not low enough? My o-chem is a little foggy.
 
Not sure. But my sugar additions go in at flameout or high krausen. I want the yeast to focus on the maltose first.
 

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