Well they list their attenuation range on the site as being a little lower than chico, but it looks like yours went pretty dry. It's a pretty well rounded flavor profile in general, you'll have to let me know how yours turns out. I'm moving the pale into kegs next weekend and dry hopping then.
So I double checked, and this beer actually fermented down to 1.010, from 1.065, for something like 84% attenuation!
It had a half pound of sugar, and I mashed at 150. The beer is fantastic, albeit a tad thin. Next time I'll drop the sugar and mash a little higher, but as far as the NorCal yeast goes, I'm a fan. LIke you said, it's a rounded flavor profile, it doesn't really accentuate either the hops or the malt, and it's super clean as well. This yeast also ferments incredibly fast to start, it took off like a rocket, but once you hit 70% AA it takes a while to finish up those last few gravity points.
I also did a terrible job on temp control. My ferment chamber was full, and the ferment temps went from 62 to 67 overnight, back down to 62, back up to 68....so it was a bit of a rollercoaster.
I just brewed a batch of sour beer at Factotum last week, and we used Inland Island's lacto brevis. We held the wort at 90-100 degrees, and their head brewer just told me a few days ago that the carboys actually had a blow-out....with lacto. I've never heard of that before. So here's to Inland Island!
Here's the NorCal IPA recipe, if anyone is interested. I think this is one of the best IPA's I've made:
10 lb 2-row
3 lb Maris Otter
1 lb carapils
8 oz munich
8 oz corn sugar
mash @ 150
1 oz Apollo - 60 min
0.5 oz chinook - 30 min
1 oz each apollo, cascade, centennial - 0 min - steep for 5 minutes
cool to 160, then add:
1 oz each amarillo, columbus, simcoe - steep for 30 minutes
1.5 oz chinook dry hop
1 oz each apollo, cascade, columbus dry hop
Inland Island Northern California Ale yeast.
I dry hopped on day 5, let them sit for 7 days, then crash cooled for 2 days and kegged! Fantastic beer. Next time I'll replace the corn sugar with malt to get a little more body.
Since this thread is about the Colorado IPA yeast, I should mention I used it for my annual wet hop ale. I don't have much experience with the conan yeast, but this beer was also very tasty. It went from 1.069 to 1.010 with that yeast. Really, I think at this point I can recommend any of their yeast.