Dgallo
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I’d bet you’ll land at 5.0Well see I haven't checked it previously. I know my mash ph is 5.2 usually dead on every time. My plan on Sunday is to check it at knockout and adjust if needed.
I’d bet you’ll land at 5.0Well see I haven't checked it previously. I know my mash ph is 5.2 usually dead on every time. My plan on Sunday is to check it at knockout and adjust if needed.
I haven’t heard of going that low at whirlpool (unless you’re doing a cool ship or spontaneous beer). What is the advantage?I've started using phophoric acid post boil pre whirlpool to get pH down to less than 4.5.
I've got a lot of sour grapes malt which I use in the mash to drop pH if needed during that stage.
It was in a craft beer and brewing podcast with a brewer making a lot of award winning NEIPA.I haven’t heard of going that low at whirpool
Also, if you have the resource you saw it in, can you send me the link. I’d like to read it
Are You sure 4.6 wasn’t the targeted post dryhop ph and not the knock out ph? 4.5-4.6 is what many folks, including myself, target post drhoping to soften bitterness and to fall below the safety threshold.It was in a craft beer and brewing podcast with a brewer making a lot of award winning NEIPA.
Think it was from 2023.
Do you adjust post-dry hop or do you adjust earlier and design your recipes to land here?Are You sure 4.6 wasn’t the targeted post dryhop ph and not the knock out ph? 4.5-4.6 is what many folks, including myself, target post drhoping to soften bitterness and to fall below the safety threshold.
It is very rare I need to do anything to adjust post mash if I target 5.2. I use lacticDo you adjust post-dry hop or do you adjust earlier and design your recipes to land here?
Citric or phosphoric on cold side?
What is your pre and post dryhop ph on that beer and with what yeast?I've started using phophoric acid post boil pre whirlpool to get pH down to less than 4.5.
I've got a lot of sour grapes malt which I use in the mash to drop pH if needed during that stage.
Hi I've dropped it to the 4.6 post boil pre whirlpool. The hops do increase pH but I haven't bothered to check the pH around the dry hop. I was using Verdant or hazy daze II.What is your pre and post dryhop ph on that beer and with what yeast?
Surely not!Loaded the keg with O2 to really help the hops shine
the hops need to breathe, tooSurely not!
AHH yes.the hops need to breathe, too
I have some Talus I was considering using. I don't want much wood character. Would 2 oz in 6 gallons be reasonable or is 1 oz better?
At the brewery I'm about to depart from, we pretty much strictly use some combo of Citra/Mosaic/Idaho 7 on the hot side and leave the unique hops for the cold side. It's a waste otherwise in my opinion. You get 90% of the character from dry-hopping.I've been tinkering with the idea of using specific hops only on hot side and others only on cold side. I feel like I've always made hazies with 2-3 hops and used them both on hot and cold side, but some hops don't express well on hot side and some don't express well on cold side. Anyone have great experiences with some hot side bangers?
Like Janish, I definitely dig Idaho 7 on hot side for sure. It can be hit or miss on cold side.
Simcoe another good one.
On the other hand, I never pick up crazy flavors from Nelson on hot side - it's best in DH for me.
I did get a ton of flavor from a Simcoe/Mosaic WP on a west coast IPA recently. Tasted it pre-DH and it was delicious already.At the brewery I'm about to depart from, we pretty much strictly use some combo of Citra/Mosaic/Idaho 7 on the hot side and leave the unique hops for the cold side. It's a waste otherwise in my opinion. You get 90% of the character from dry-hopping.
Sounds like KCBC hotside hops. That said I think 90% of character from dryhoping is a pretty extreme number. I’d say around 65-70%. There’s are reason most guidelines from some of the best that do the style are doing a 1:2-2.5 ratio of hotside to coldside by weightAt the brewery I'm about to depart from, we pretty much strictly use some combo of Citra/Mosaic/Idaho 7 on the hot side and leave the unique hops for the cold side. It's a waste otherwise in my opinion. You get 90% of the character from dry-hopping.
Anyone tried centennial in the WP? Never hear about it even though it is the number 1 in survivables
Ha! Head about 75 miles north and you'll find me! Well, for another week or so at least.Sounds like KCBC hotside hops. That said I think 90% of character from dryhoping is a pretty extreme number. I’d say around 65-70%. There’s are reason most guidelines from some of the best that do the style are doing a 1:2-2.5 ratio of hotside to coldside by weight
I did get a ton of flavor from a Simcoe/Mosaic WP on a west coast IPA recently. Tasted it pre-DH and it was delicious already.
Nonetheless, something I haven't seen before is where NZ hops fit into the Survivables chart...
Nelson much lower than Nectaron on the totem pole here, but it's still on this list so it can't be terrible.
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So what is your fermentation process??? I agree btw.Nectaron and 586 work great hot side for this style. Nelson works great too. It all depends on your fermentation process what will eventually survive in my opinion.
Till what psi do you let it build?I have recently started fermenting in kegs to be able retain the survivables happening during fermentation. When I get close to terminal I’ll let the beer naturally carobonate. That natural pressure helps retain flavor and aroma from the Wp charge. It works form me and my very basic brewing equipment.
He never mentioned quantity/ratio didn’t matter on hot side, just selection. There’s a reason breweries use their hops that don’t rank well in their sensory analysis in the whirlpool as opposed to cold side.Sounds like KCBC hotside hops. That said I think 90% of character from dryhoping is a pretty extreme number. I’d say around 65-70%. There’s are reason most guidelines from some of the best that do the style are doing a 1:2-2.5 ratio of hotside to coldside by weight