Yes it does and because of the temperature it does so quite quickly too. Plus warm extraction definitely does not give the same results as cold extraction.If I boil water to remove O2, does it not regain O2 as it cools back down tp 70? I dunno.
Yes it does and because of the temperature it does so quite quickly too. Plus warm extraction definitely does not give the same results as cold extraction.If I boil water to remove O2, does it not regain O2 as it cools back down tp 70? I dunno.
Yes, I'm still using a bottling bucket and I believe with decent results. As almost always in homebrewing, there are many ways to skin this cat, I think.
FWIW that beer I was talking about placed first in NEIPA category in a comp we have over here. And I know for a fact that in that comp also small commercial craft brewers are participating (mostly micro and nano scale)...but people who do have unitanks, kegs, ability to perform closed transfers, beer gun or counter-pressure bottle filling, and all that cool stuff. Granted, it may not be at the level of some comps you guys have over there in the US...and it is not my purpose to brag or anything, but just to make the point that it could not have been objectively a bad NEIPA.
I added 1 gram per gallon. I took the dosage suggested by @tyrub42 in his post in that other thread that was linked here. The dosage seems a bit high, maybe next time I will try to scale it down a bit (it is way more than the package recommended).
And no noticeable flavor contributions.
I would go with ascorbic acid rather than citric. It is certainly more flavor neutral and the antioxidant power is also higher, I believe...
As I understand it, your water is essentially RO / distilled water. This article Water Chemistry – How to Build Your Water – Bertus Brewery, which could be considered the "Cliff Notes" of A Brewing Water Chemistry Primer, is one good starting point.Bit redundant now probably, but you guys also spoke of water chemistry, which I pay very little heed to. I live in Eastern Canada. My water is super low in any additives and minerals. Like almost zeros across the board. Am I therefore likely to have a high or low pH mash? Should I be adding to it to avoid pH issues - specific to IPAs? I don't bother with anything else I make, and I have been happy enough with my other beers.
Though I never read the entire post, I found it interesting that @tyrub42 introduced his AA during the bottling bucket and sugar (with some KMB- how much, I wonder?), while you chose to do it at dry hop time (minus KMB)? I wonder if it makes any difference.
You opted not to use KMB or SMB (assume Potassium Metabi is the first yes?). Might I ask why? I have read only small amounts would be OK. I wonder if @tyrub42 has done any batches minus KMB since.
Bit redundant now probably, but you guys also spoke of water chemistry, which I pay very little heed to. I live in Eastern Canada. My water is super low in any additives and minerals. Like almost zeros across the board. Am I therefore likely to have a high or low pH mash? Should I be adding to it to avoid pH issues - specific to IPAs? I don't bother with anything else I make, and I have been happy enough with my other beers.
@kbaggen - can you explain #6 "hop tea" - is this a hop tea to dry hop? A wet hop? Or for after the boil/whirlpooling? Sorry - first I've heard of hop tea.
If I boil water to remove O2, does it not regain O2 as it cools back down tp 70? I dunno.
#3 why no sugar dilutions? You mean as stirred in a bottling bucket? That is, unfortunately, my normal practice. Pretty sure I read someone still uses a bottling bucket with decent results. Does seem it would be added O2 risk.
@Taket_al_Tauro one last question.... or two, or more
Ferment temp? My ambient temp in basement is around 64 degrees - do you crash at all? I have a porch down there would take it to around 45 degrees if needed, but I am reading no crashes for NEIPAs.
Bottling / Carbonation temp? I generally warm up a basement bedroom to around 70-72 degrees. Open a bottle after week, to check, and Its usually easily drinkable by then. If i feel it is ready, should I refrigerate the lot? Doubt they will all fit in our spare fridge with my 2 ambers, and lagers. SWMBO would also shoot me. Could dump bottles out in the garage. 40 degrees out there or less.
What CO2 volume you aim for? Do you prime a little higher sugar since you fill bottles? Lower?
For my 6 gallon beers I rather just throw 3/4 cup of sugar in the bottle bucket after boiling and gently stir. I have yet to weigh sugar. Estimate for around 2.5 CO2 on the calculator and go from there. Never entirely sure the exact volume after trub anyway. Do you use regular table sugar?
Ok 10 questions
PS - just had a sample to do a gravity. Man that stuff tastes super tasty. I'd drink it as is carbonated. What a bite its got. Colour is pale yellow. Hardly any colour of note. Forgot to take SG reading. Never really my intent.
@Taket_al_Tauro well, my post is specific to bottling NEIPA and, expert or not, your response seems my best bet. I thank you all for the assistance. Have plans to up my dry hop bill a bit, add some AA, fill them bottles to the brim. Will post some pix and perhaps do some 30-60 day comparison,for the record. For the record, my initial AA research revealed a teaspoon or 3.4 grams per 5 gallons ..... i will need to confirm further. Does that needto be diluted in anyway?
Since my timeline is christmas, im going to shorten my ferment period, which many report as favourable for the style anyway. Might do a pseudo crash of say 50 degrees for 24 hours. Thinking i might use a blow off contraption to mitigate o2 in the cold crash. Not sure that would work. Something i need to search up on. More questions-doh!
Hey I'm no NEIPA expert, I've just got one under my belt so-far. There are people on this forum that are way more knowledgeable than me when it comes to this style...(and other styles as well, for that matter ;-)). Still, let me try and answer your questions:
I think that ambient basement temp should work. Fermentation should not get too hot even without temp control. If you have the possibility to raise the temperature to above 70 for a few days when fermentation subsides, this won’t hurt… it has become my SOP for all my beers. Afterwards let the temp get back to your basement temp for the dry hopping. I usually wait a few weeks before dry hopping and then packaging, to give the yeast time to settle and so on...but I know most people go much faster for this style. I think it is up to you to find outr what works best for you. As I said earlier, I do not cold crash because I have a feeling that with my current rather low-tech approach to fermentation and packaging, a cold crash would do more harm than good (specifically, it would increase oxidation risk). To prevent hop matter from getting into my bottles, I run the beer through a monofilament filter that I place in my bottling bucket,
@tyrub42, as I understand from your posts, you do have a CO2 tank. You also mentioned that you cold crash. I would be interested to hear if you do anything to prevent air suckback during the cold crash? Do you hook up your CO2 tank to your fermenter to create some head pressure?
A bottle priming temp of 70-72 is fine. I would also test one bottle at about 1 week, and if carbonation is OK then I would refrigerate them all immediately if you have the possibility. Do not take risks with SWMBO, put those bottles in that garage at 40 F….unless it sees some large temperature swings between day and night, you’ve got a perfect place for cold storing your beers!
I usually condition in my apartment at about 73 F, and I found that it takes no more than one week to have fully carbonated bottles. Then they go either in the fridge or in the basement, depending on available space. This does not mean that they are already in their best shape for drinking after just one week. They will need at least another two weeks to hit their prime.
I aim for ca. 2.5 vols of CO2 for this style. I use regular table sugar.
Good luck!
So, thought id post the final slightly modified recipe. Few changes from the original posted.
I dont do a steady mash. Simply let temp drift from 158 to mid 140s over 90 minutes. Do this with all my beers. i suspect the result is more of a dry beer.
On recipe below, i have 24 liters in fermentor had an og of 1.050 and its dropped to 1.008. So just north of 5.2 % which was my aim. All my beers drop under 1.008-06 range with this mash process.
Grains:
5 # Canadian 2-row
5 # Golden Promise
1 # Wheat
1 # Flaked Barley
1 # Flaked Oats
1/4 # Honey Malt
Yeast
US-05 - i got the notes to change, but it was too late, and all i had on hand. Mash was underway already.
Hops
0.5 oz of falconers for 10 minutes before flame out........ i just could not not bitter a little
Whirlpool around 160 let stand for 20-30 minutes - stir? (is stirring key)
1.5 oz Citra
.5 oz Galaxy
1 oz mosaic
Dry Hop: SG was around 1.012-010 at day 5, so thats when i dry hopped.
2 oz citra
2 oz mosaic
.5 oz galaxy
1 Level teaspoon of Ascorbic Acid diluted in cooled down boiled water 3-4 grams
Will bottle for 2.5 co2 volumes
Everything goes into the fermentor. Trub, the lot. No filtering. I do this with my ambers and reds, and have had no issues. Not sure its a great idea with a neipa, and all those whirlpooled hops. I wasnt really thinking ahead. Hoping i dont get a bitter bomb. I feel i might.
Pictures and report to come in a coupke of weeks i estimate.....
@Taket_al_Tauro - think you might be right, though I dont experience large bitterness in my ambers. Perhaps the taste of amber just compliments the bitter. The key difference would be the hop schedule is rather larger than it might be for my amber.Holy sheez I almost don't believe my eyes that even the half filled bottle is not yet showing some apparent signs of darkening...would then be interested to hear how it tastes compared to the rest...
Concerning the too bitter taste. Although dumping all the trub in the fermenter may not be ideal, I'm not sure this is the cause of your increased bitterness. I'd rather suspect this is more of an issue with too high of a boil pH. I know you said you have some good, low alkalinity water for brewing. However it might still be the case that your boil pH is a little too high and that will extract more bitterness from the hops.
The key difference would be the hop schedule is rather larger than it might be for my amber
Any advice on lowering pH? Gypsum? Calcium?
Thanks for the mention! Another trick that I am going to start trying is to add some ascorbic acid. It's 4 grams for a 5 gallon batch. You can add it to the mash or at flameout. Some people say you should also add .2 grams campden if you didn't already use some to treat your water. Campden is also an antioxidant.I know it's huge, but check out this thread American IPA - "Northeast" style IPA
and in particular search for posts by SRJHops - he worked hard at bottling NEIPAs and I believe he had success (if I remember correctly)