EndOfLine
Well-Known Member
You mean mash right? 165 is a pasteurize temp
Just try it.
Why would I ever try to ferment at 165F. Name brewer in the world that does this. That is 100 degrees higher than the yeast strains call for.
Anyone ever bottle or keg this after 10 days using 1318. My schedule next weekend is not conducive to bottling it then at day 12-14 when I normally would. So I want to dry hop today, day 5 while primary is slowing, the carboy is now ramped up to 71deg to help 1318 reach fg. So I'm thinking of bottling on this Thursday which would be 10 days post brew day. I'll take a couple gravity readings maybe Tuesday and Thursday to make sure it's done. I'd just rather avoid bottle bombs or overcarbonation issues and if day 10 is to soon then I'll have to postpone the dry hop and bottle it on day 15 or 16.
I've kegged on day 10 and 11 multiple times. FGs have finished somewhat high, in the .015-.017 range, for a pale ale but I just think it's because mashing temp and grains used. It could drop a couple more points if I left it in possibly but the beer is still really good so I don't care that much.
As long as your OG is in that range and you ramped the temp around day five I think you'll be ok. I don't think you'll get bottle bombs but could get some overcarbed ones if it's not completely done. I think this style really benefits from a lower carb too, 2.0-2.2 tops. Keep that in mind.
I just brewed a 10 gallon batch of a NE Style IPA with predominantly Galaxy followed by Citra. I plan on putting it into 2 different kegs. One staying with the original recipe and then adding something to the second keg for a twist on it. I'm hoping to go away from the norm of using a different dry hop and I just tried coffee in my last ne style IPA which was good but now I'm on to something new. I was thinking adding some good Sauvignon Blanc. Any other suggestions?
coffee? that sounds awful! i'd have to taste it to believe it!!!
Yeah the coffee was a cold brew of a light roast that had notes of lemon and citrus so it worked well the the citra/heull melon combo. Plus the cold brew cuts out the bitterness. A lot of people preferred it over the base beer.coffee? that sounds awful! i'd have to taste it to believe it!!!
Yeah I was thinking of doing the fruit route with either mango or peaches but I like pineapple also. My wife wanted to complain but couldn't because it smelled so good that the whole house was engulfed with a mango/papaya aroma during the first couple days of fermentation. WLP007 is the yeast of choice this time aroundA brewery here did a coffee IPA, and it got mixed reviews.
Many people enjoed the extra little zing it had, coffee beans tend to have a citrus type flavor, which can compliment.
If you decide to use Sauvignon Blanc, be careful, as it will significantly increase the perception of acidity. IMO I wouldn't so this one, unless you've got some form of souring already in there (Lacto) some other type of fruit might be beneficial though?
another local brewery here, adds a number of different fruits to IPA's and they all taste fantastic, without over taking thebase.
Feijoa
Mango
Pineapple
Grapefruit (obvious)
I think He did peaches as well?
Oranges are a good choice as well.
(I've never had it) but someone does or did a coconut IPA awhile back?
coffee? that sounds awful! i'd have to taste it to believe it!!!
I did an all Citra coffee milkshake NEIPA last spring and it was fantastic. Lactose, whole wheat flour, etc. Dry hopped it with 8oz Citra and 10oz of whole beans.
![]()
I just brewed a 10 gallon batch of a NE Style IPA with predominantly Galaxy followed by Citra. I plan on putting it into 2 different kegs. One staying with the original recipe and then adding something to the second keg for a twist on it. I'm hoping to go away from the norm of using a different dry hop and I just tried coffee in my last ne style IPA which was good but now I'm on to something new. I was thinking adding some good Sauvignon Blanc. Any other suggestions?
Question for the group - how do you deal with (or do you even get), significant hop particles in your NEIPAs?
Question for the group - how do you deal with (or do you even get), significant hop particles in your NEIPAs? I did a DDH, first stage in the fermenter, second stage in the keg. The second stage DH was 4 or so ounces, so not extreme. I keg DH loose, I have a shortened diptube (like 1/2 gallon or so shortened at least), and have drilled my stainless steel dry hopper and fit this over the dip tube. This has worked pretty well, but I usually end up with hop debris for a little while. This last batch, it is never ending. The biggest issue is this makes the beer painfully astringent and bitter, as you are scraping your tongue with tons of tiny little hop particles. Aroma is amazing but its pretty much undrinkable until it settles, if it does. The irony being, each day it is on the decline as we all know.
I am thinking the Clear Beer Draught system is in my future.
This picture is from a beer that has been kegged and under CO2 for 9 days at about 40 degrees, undisturbed. The picture was taken about 24 hours after it was poured and started to settle. When it comes out of the keg the hop floaties are everywhere. and they are suuuch tiny little flecks. I don't mind the yeast gunk but there is still so much hop junk.
I keg DH loose
Here is a shot of how good the Clear Beer Draught system works with these beers - worth every penny!Question for the group - how do you deal with (or do you even get), significant hop particles in your NEIPAs? I did a DDH, first stage in the fermenter, second stage in the keg. The second stage DH was 4 or so ounces, so not extreme. I keg DH loose, I have a shortened diptube (like 1/2 gallon or so shortened at least), and have drilled my stainless steel dry hopper and fit this over the dip tube. This has worked pretty well, but I usually end up with hop debris for a little while. This last batch, it is never ending. The biggest issue is this makes the beer painfully astringent and bitter, as you are scraping your tongue with tons of tiny little hop particles. Aroma is amazing but its pretty much undrinkable until it settles, if it does. The irony being, each day it is on the decline as we all know.
I am thinking the Clear Beer Draught system is in my future.
This picture is from a beer that has been kegged and under CO2 for 9 days at about 40 degrees, undisturbed. The picture was taken about 24 hours after it was poured and started to settle. When it comes out of the keg the hop floaties are everywhere. and they are suuuch tiny little flecks. I don't mind the yeast gunk but there is still so much hop junk.
Here is a shot of how good the Clear Beer Draught system works with these beers - worth every penny!
I kegged this five days ago with 4oz of LOOSE pellets in the keg. I let it sit for three days at room temp, chilled for 24hrs then added 30lbs PSI for about six hours and shaken / rolled vigorously several times during that period, afterwards I dropped the pressure to 12lbs ---- that was 12hrs ago. No yeast, no trub, just the tiniest bit of hop matter still there, but will be gone by tomorrow.
To be fair though the last half gallon or so of the keg will produce the gunk that you are trying to avoid.
Wow!! That looks fantastic!! Would you mind throwing out the recipe for that one?!
For anyone debating the use of hopstand vs dry hop there was a very thorough investigation done by Rock Bottom Breweries and published under the title: "Maximizing Hop Aroma and Flavor Through Process Variables". I was able to find the entire PDF through a quick google search.
I highly recommend reading it and observing specifically the graphics comparing the results. They tested:
1: Short Hopstand (50 minute postboil residence) 0.5 oz hops per gallon
2: Long Hopstand (80 minute postboil residence) 0.5 oz hops per gallon
3: Half Hopstand/Dry (80 minute postboil residence) 0.25 oz per gallon in hopstand, 0.25 oz per gallon in dry
4: Dry (no hopstand) 0.5 hops per gallon
The results were definite that #3 (half hopstand/half dry) produced the most hop aroma and hop flavor. #4, which was a dry hop only with the same amount of total hops, had equivalent hop aroma but was lacking on the hop flavor. The spider graphics in the article are very telling.
The study was done using commercial equipment, which are different than us homebrewers, but the results really helped me understand what can be accomplished using a specific set of controlled procedures.
I also found the LODO discussion on here interesting, and got me thinking that shaking the carboy for oxygenation, rather than using pure O2 and a diffusion stone may be why some hopstand results suffer.
McT
I still think I'd rather just go with my 2 oz/gallon dry-hop-only in the interest of saving time during brew day. I had forgotten about that study though.
What are you referring to with the shaking vs pure O2? Pure O2 may destroy some of the hopstand character? FWIW, I stopped using oxygen a long time ago and still get the attenuation I like. I just shake my carboys and pitch a large amount of very healthy yeast. Saves time.
LoDO refers to:
1. Oxygen exposure on the hot side that subtly change the malt flavors.
2. Long term oxygen exposure on the cold side. Oxygenating when you are pitching active yeast is not considered detrimental because the yeast quickly (within hours) take up all of the dissolved oxygen. However, racking into a keg after fermenting is complete will result in DO above what is considered acceptable thresholds with just about any set up.
How about racking to a purges keg. Heard what the DO level is from that? Seems to give good results
That right there is your problem. If you must DH in a keg, do it in a mesh bag or something. I have stopped dry hopping in the keg and do it all in the primary with no ill effects.
I am on board with all of this and think its a great way to cut down on packaging O2 but how do you dryhop or more specifically keg hop? Dryhopping with points left in fermentation taste very different from a keg hop, as it seems more muted or blended. I guess you could leave a dry hop bag in the SK during ferment but I would think the aromatics would be washed away by the 125ish gallons of fermentation CO2. Maybe just spund the FK until it is reeeeal close to finished and the dry hop the SK and tie it to the FK?
Did you transfer from the DH keg?
What's the mesh size of the dry hopper?
Here is a shot of how good the Clear Beer Draught system works with these beers - worth every penny!
I kegged this five days ago with 4oz of LOOSE pellets in the keg. I let it sit for three days at room temp, chilled for 24hrs then added 30lbs PSI for about six hours and shaken / rolled vigorously several times during that period, afterwards I dropped the pressure to 12lbs ---- that was 12hrs ago. No yeast, no trub, just the tiniest bit of hop matter still there, but will be gone by tomorrow.
To be fair though the last half gallon or so of the keg will produce the gunk that you are trying to avoid.