if you brew ipa's often, ya gotta buy hops in bulk. i've been getting them from hopsdirect, but I know there are a couple other good sources to buy by the lb. pretty much cuts the price in half, and the hops are fresher.
Anybody tried making NEIPA style but on American Wheat grain - 50/50 pilsner+wheat malt?
Hey Brau just curious, I am about to brew this and am back and forth on where to dial in my numbers.
I have had Treehouse Julius and quite a few of Trilliums IPAs. I LOVED the Julius flavor and mouth feel. I was not a fan of the Trillium beers. They had a very weird type of flavor to me(almost astringent?) tasting.
With that said, if you've had both of those beers, what would you say Treehouse uses as their chloride:sulfate ratio? That is what I'd like to aim for but don't know the difference as I haven't made a NE IPA yet so haven't played around with ratios.
Hey Brau just curious, I am about to brew this and am back and forth on where to dial in my numbers.
I have had Treehouse Julius and quite a few of Trilliums IPAs. I LOVED the Julius flavor and mouth feel. I was not a fan of the Trillium beers. They had a very weird type of flavor to me(almost astringent?) tasting.
With that said, if you've had both of those beers, what would you say Treehouse uses as their chloride:sulfate ratio? That is what I'd like to aim for but don't know the difference as I haven't made a NE IPA yet so haven't played around with ratios.
So this happened, forgot I was out of honey malt and added .5lb of lactose. It turned out awesome, didn't add a lot of sweetness and the mouthfeel is what I think we're all searching for.
What hops did you use?
Do you know what your FG was?
For whatever reason, my NEIPAs regularly hit 80%+ attenuation regardless of the grains I use so I sometimes end up a little thinner (1.010) than I want. I added 0.5# lactose in a brew and also 0.5# maltodextrin. Color, mouthfeel and gravity (1.014) were really good but I had maybe a tad too much sweetness, but that was with Citra, Mosaic and Galaxy so the beer was going to have some sweetness anyway. I'm just going to start adding 0.5# maltodextrin at the end of the boil and see where that gets me mouthfeel-wise.
What hops did you use?
Do you know what your FG was?
For whatever reason, my NEIPAs regularly hit 80%+ attenuation regardless of the grains I use so I sometimes end up a little thinner (1.010) than I want. I added 0.5# lactose in a brew and also 0.5# maltodextrin. Color, mouthfeel and gravity (1.014) were really good but I had maybe a tad too much sweetness, but that was with Citra, Mosaic and Galaxy so the beer was going to have some sweetness anyway. I'm just going to start adding 0.5# maltodextrin at the end of the boil and see where that gets me mouthfeel-wise.
So this happened, forgot I was out of honey malt and added .5lb of lactose. It turned out awesome, didn't add a lot of sweetness and the mouthfeel is what I think we're all searching for.
adding some to NE IPA might be a good move. I suppose it is a lot more calories per beer though
Hmmmm..... not if you used it in a session IPA.... might be a nice way to get body and richness into a low ABV IPA. Had never thought about it before. Intriguing.
Google "tired hands milkshake ipas"
If you haven't made a NEIPA yet, ratios are the last things you should worry about honestly.
What things are you referring to?
-I have my brewing setup pretty locked down, and am able to keep mash temps within 1°F of setpoint
-I always make starters and use calculators so I'm pitching the right amount of yeast
-I have a lab grade pH meter so that I can keep all my pH dialed in.
-I have a glycol chiller setup on my Conicals so that I can keep temps within .5°F, do co2 pressurized transfers, and purge with co2 after each dry hop addition
-I keg so no worries with bottle conditioning
-I keep my sanitation game on point
Anything else I'm missing? I've made plenty of great beers and IPAs, just never a NE IPA which are definitely my new favorite beer.
Sounds like you'll make an awesome NEIPA! Go for it! I'd take Brau's advice on the starting water profile. Personally, I like to either boost by chloride and sulfate to around 100 ppm or just boost the chloride to 100 ppm and leave the sulfate at whatever it is from the tap (mine is around 15 ppm depending on the season.) You'll figure out what you like the more you brew the style. The sulfate gives a much more drying character that can be very pleasant but can make smaller alcohol versions taste thinner.
see if the RO water source makes any kind of impact(because without sending them off to ward labs who really knows how well they are working).
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One thing I haven't got good at yet is being able to pick out tastes in the beer. That's why I wish I knew what it was in the cans of Trillium that I tasted and didn't like.
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I've read about people adding salts to a beer to see how more chloride would make it taste or how more sulfate would make it taste, but I have no idea how to break it down that small to know how much to add. I thought about
Sorry Brau one other question, when you refer to weyermann wheat in your recipe, are you referring to weyermann white wheat?
There are so many different ones they make so I want to be sure to grab the right one.
I've been messing around getting my water from different places to see if the RO water source makes any kind of impact(because without sending them off to ward labs who really knows how well they are working).
One thing I haven't got good at yet is being able to pick out tastes in the beer. That's why I wish I knew what it was in the cans of Trillium that I tasted and didn't like. It wasn't the whole beer overall, it was one thing I tasted that I have tasted in 1 or two other brands before that I just don't like, and I feel like it has to do with something in the water like either too much sulfate or chloride maybe(but I have no idea of what too much of those taste like in a beer).