Report on my 3 batches blending experiment —
Batch 1
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Batches 2 and 3
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Final Product!!


- not fully carbonated yet, it’s been only 1 week into bottle conditioning and flavor development has been out of this world!, starts with a very minuscule acidity, followed by tangerine, caramel and tangy orange rind, with a very restrained rounded/consistent bitterness and then finishing with bubblegum and melon with bubblegum sticking to your palate for an hour after drinking this.. haze and color are sick, haze is solid and permanent, and the closest I could ever dream to the reported 10.8 SRM for Julius.. and we are talking about an almost flat beer right now LOL
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Reported color for Julius (10.8 SRM) — compare for yourself—
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I knew going into this that final gravities and ABV will be a difficult task to estimate and hit, this one finished higher than anticipated at 20 points and compounded ABV is around 8% so I will guess it will be a very close replicate to King Julius instead of Julius (have tried Julius several times but not KJ). Between boil and dry hopping, hops went into this brew a total of 7 times in less than 18 days (sincerely I could have done even more) and I was brewing a batch basically every weekend LOL so I can bet any professional brewer could do this way much faster. This brew is a hop bomb but still surprisingly with a very restrained bitterness. Now it’s up to the next few (3-5) weeks to see how this brew develops. Can’t wait to see how this tastes when it’s fully conditioned!
I was growing skeptical at each step as this brew seemed muted in many ways but once it got into the bottle all these layers of complexity exploded. Like
@Northern_Brewer mentioned before, bottle/cask conditioning is key for flavor development. I didn’t pursue krausening at this time as that would have caused de-gassing/overflowing issues when bottling. Yeast activity was dead on the bones at bottling so it will take time for the yeast to rise up and finish. Therefore, I still believe either krausening (or high yeast activity) to that matter are the key for speedy conditioning so this type of blended brews can be turned around quickly. Now the ultimate test is up to time with hopes that phenolics don’t take over as this bomb conditions.