My NEIPAs just continue to be slightly off over and over no matter my hop adjustments. The latest iteration had a whirlpool at 165, and dry hops for 6 days, still grassy. I use pellet hops from yakima. What other reasons could I be missing?
how many oz's are you using in each addition? I read that yakima have a mild aroma with pine and lemon so maybe that's why it tastes grassy in large amounts; which is what you have to use with the NEIPA style. Have you tried any other hops or just the yakima?
From my experience grassy flavors usually come from dry hopping for too long but in this case that doesn't seem to be the case. Maybe it's just the amount combined with the hop variety.
You read that all YVH hops have a mild pine and lemon flavor, regardless of varietal? Can you cite the source? I've never heard or experienced that.
OP, post your entire recipe/process
Pretty sure it was the gold variety.... Brooklyn Brew shop described it as mild, with lemon zest and pine...
FWIW... "produced by the union of Cluster hops and a wild Slovenian male. Consequently, it boats the same citrusy, grapefruity characteristics of that all-American staple, tempered by a smooth, high-farnesene mildness reminiscent of noble hops from the European father."
Yakima is a place, a valley in Washington that produces 75% of US hops.
Yakima Valley Hops is a hop supplier, located in that place.
Yakima Gold is a hop variety.
Yakima is a place, a valley in Washington that produces 75% of US hops.
Yakima Valley Hops is a hop supplier, located in that place.
Yakima Gold is a hop variety.
My NEIPAs just continue to be slightly off over and over no matter my hop adjustments. The latest iteration had a whirlpool at 165, and dry hops for 6 days, still grassy. I use pellet hops from yakima. What other reasons could I be missing?
how many oz's are you using in each addition? I read that yakima have a mild aroma with pine and lemon so maybe that's why it tastes grassy in large amounts; which is what you have to use with the NEIPA style. Have you tried any other hops or just the yakima?
From my experience grassy flavors usually come from dry hopping for too long but in this case that doesn't seem to be the case. Maybe it's just the amount combined with the hop variety.
Pretty sure it was the gold variety.... Brooklyn Brew shop described it as mild, with lemon zest and pine...
FWIW... "produced by the union of Cluster hops and a wild Slovenian male. Consequently, it boats the same citrusy, grapefruity characteristics of that all-American staple, tempered by a smooth, high-farnesene mildness reminiscent of noble hops from the European father."