Great interview with Henry from Monkish to be found here, with the first half talking a lot about the processes he uses for creating his ipas.
It's mainly interesting because the high Cl-SO4 ratio and the dry-hopping during fermentation don't seem to be that important as we all think.
Also nice to hear that his NEIPAs take 30 days from brewing before they are released in cans, mainly because of stability reasons it seems.
Yeah, that was intriguing. They do not dry hop during fermentation. They only dry hop after fermentation and diacetyl rest is done. And they dry hop under pressure.
And Henry was super high on the Galaxy/Citra combo to get less harsh flavors.
That's interesting. Is there any insight to the pressure and temp he dry hops at?Yeah, that was intriguing. They do not dry hop during fermentation. They only dry hop after fermentation and diacetyl rest is done. And they dry hop under pressure.
And Henry was super high on the Galaxy/Citra combo to get less harsh flavors.
Definitely interesting. Having had their beers they are definitely in the top handful of NEIPAs along side Triple Crossing, Aslin, Other Half, etc.. Might have to give that method a try.
wow, really?! I was going to ask. They seem like they weren't into most IPAs, but then they made some NEIPA style ones and are now famous. Has anyone had their beers? I guess that answers that question. I am wondering if even if you add the hops after fermentation is basically done if you still get biotransformation? The hop flavor seems so different between a beer that has been in contact with hops with yeast at room temp vs a beer that has hops in it at cold temps.
I agree, I fly out of lax every month, I stop at monkish every time now. I am blown away with their beers. Makes for a great red eye.Definitely interesting. Having had their beers they are definitely in the top handful of NEIPAs along side Triple Crossing, Aslin, Other Half, etc.. Might have to give that method a try.
The Mosher interview was by far more interesting to me. I don't know how much of it is BS though. He said he is using like 50% flaked grains in his NEIPA-style beers. I could see it, but I haven't tried it. I've never really thought I could tell a difference b/w beers brewed with like 15% or less flaked grains vs just 2-row (maybe color), but I could see getting a lot of creaminess from 50% flaked wheat and 50% 2-row. Interested to try it out.
I was really surprised when he talked about using oak during fermentation to get vanilla taste.
I believe he said 8lbs/bbl was the most they had done and that was for a Triple NEIPA. Thought he said usually they do 4-5lbs/bbl.Dang! Mosher said 8 lbs/barrel! I've never added that much! 4 oz/gal by my estimate!
yeah, fascinating. i wonder if the character is different from just adding vanilla extract. don’t want any wood flavor for sure. wood can make beer super creamy though.
I'm not sure overnight in wine will do a lot of sanitising, but it won't hurt I guess.
That's interesting. Is there any insight to the pressure and temp he dry hops at?
My most recent process has been to keg at ~1.020, usually day 3. I open the top of keg and fill up my keg the "old school" way with a hose attached to my spigot. When the keg is full I seal the lid with a burst of CO2 and purge 5 times. I wrap the keg with my ferm heater and keep it around 70f for 10 days. Place in keezer and wait for an open tap.I have big mouth fermenters (and love them) and attempted to push the beer into my kegs with CO2 but the lids don't hold enough pressure for me to do that. So I was forced to use an auto-syphon to transfer the beer. How many are getting great results using an auto-syphon?
I'm considering spunding instead though. Can someone give me their process or throw me a link to one?
My most recent process has been to keg at ~1.020, usually day 3. I open the top of keg and fill up my keg the "old school" way with a hose attached to my spigot. When the keg is full I seal the lid with a burst of CO2 and purge 5 times. I wrap the keg with my ferm heater and keep it around 70f for 10 days. Place in keezer and wait for an open tap.
My reasoning is that any oxygen picked up after transfer will be scavenged. I don't spund because with ~6 pts left I don't feel the need to have one.
I did closed transfers under pressure using a BMB. You do need to keep a hand in the lid, but 1-2 psi does work. Use a lid with two holes. Metal racking cane in one hole, with tubing attached to keg quick disconnect. In other hole, you put a hollow rubber bung. Stick a MFLto hose barb in the bung, and attach your C02 line to it. Voila.I have big mouth fermenters (and love them) and attempted to push the beer into my kegs with CO2 but the lids don't hold enough pressure for me to do that. So I was forced to use an auto-syphon to transfer the beer. How many are getting great results using an auto-syphon?
I'm considering spunding instead though. Can someone give me their process or throw me a link to one?
I did closed transfers under pressure using a BMB. You do need to keep a hand in the lid, but 1-2 psi does work. Use a lid with two holes. Metal racking cane in one hole, with tubing attached to keg quick disconnect. In other hole, you put a hollow rubber bung. Stick a MFLto hose barb in the bung, and attach your C02 line to it. Voila.
I did it probably 8+ times. I did tend to combine the old white collars with the new rubber gaskets, which helped keep it more airtight, but mot perfect.So my previous setup might have worked if I put my hand on the lid of the BMB? I'll give that a try regardless if I spund.
I soak my dry hops for 7 days with 6 ounces per 5 gallons. Trust me there is no reason to dry hop in the keg. The beer comes out cloudy, dank, juicy and delicious.I had trouble once with foamy pours which had some hop material in the poppet. I tried reversing with gas on the out post, but wound up tearing it off clearing the blockage and poured a beer immediately.