stickyfinger
Well-Known Member
i had the Cashmere bomb last weekend. Several of my friends didn’t really like it as much. I thought it was very interesting, kind of herbal in addn to the fruit character
Barn is the original location. I remember going out there when the first open and their sours and Red C red ale were the only good things they were doing. Now everything they put out is solidBeen to both and you will not be disappointed with either. Definitely go for flights at sloop. The barn location is good
Barn is the original location. I remember going out there when the first open and their sours and Red C red ale were the only good things they were doing. Now everything they put out is solid
I know a lot of you guys on here like using imperial a24 dryhop. I just picked up a package yesterday, I plan to use it in a NEIPA but I have a brut ipa planned for this weekend. You guys think this would work well in a brut?
Made a random experimental type “IPA” a few months ago with wine yeast and Brett. I didn’t crash it before adding dry hops and all the yeasts I used are notoriously poor floccers. I used 10oz of hops (even the really high polyphenol content ones like Galaxy and Enigma) in the DH and it’s the first hoppy beer I’ve made in a while that has cleared in the keg...
It leads me to believe that getting as much yeast out of the beer as possible before adding large dry hop loads is one of the key elements of haze stability. Yeast that floccs really well is a plus.
I know a lot of you guys on here like using imperial a24 dryhop. I just picked up a package yesterday, I plan to use it in a NEIPA but I have a brut ipa planned for this weekend. You guys think this would work well in a brut?
Curious to see how it turns out
The “Citrus” part of that blend is Sacch Trois, which is diastaticus. So yeah it probably would be great for a Brut IPA (If you tend to like that style). If you add a decent amount of sugar and mash really low for a long time you probably won’t even need the enzymes.
I mash 154-156 for it. Last batch I step mashed 40 mins at 148 and 30 mins at 161. Finished a 1.016 which I enjoyed a lot.So I’m guessing I should mash a little high when I use it for NEIPA, I used sacch trois in an IPA before (back when they still thought it was Brett) I think it ended up in the 1010-1012 range
I have used it once but in a blend with calypso and some cryo cascade...looking back I should if just done a smash with it to see how it performed by itself...live and learn I guess...in the beer i made I got some lime and melon notes but since it was blended its hard to say what contributed what...it was an ok IPA but not one of my favs...I would suggest trying it as a smash to really gauge what it can do...or just get ur hands on some cashmere bomb[emoji23]Has anyone tried Cashmere? Better in the whirlpool or dry hop? Good pairs with it?
@kevinkWhat does "crash completely" mean? Does that mean crash at 58 for longer than a day or does it mean crash at a temperature lower than 58 for some length of time?
I would assume it means crash completely down to your lowest temperature. So looks like 24 hr dry hop at 58F and then drop temp to near freezing for another 24 hr and
package.
I also just started canning and have only filled about a dozen so far with mixed results. My normal sop is to force carb at roughly 15psi, and I didn't want to pull the keg out to boost carbonation before canning so I just went for it like you. I definitely noticed a flatter beer after filling.
Next time I will force carb to 25psi and can the entire keg, using cold wet cans and a beer gun. I hope this helps my issues, I need to talk with someone who has more experience home canning.
At a side note.. Just wanted to throw this review in there for the No Oats / No Wheat discussion. Note the remarks of him that it misses that juicyness and creamy mouthfeel. Could be just their process is going down or the reviewer being palette fatigued but nonetheless an interesting observation.
This is a trillium beer made with
ABV: 6.8%
MALT: Pale Malt, Honey Malt, Victory Malt
HOPS: Mosaic
So far most neipa i've had had a stable haze. Most where not older then 3 months.Soft and and pillowy (words from Trillium description) is not the same a juicy and creamy....so maybe they weren’t going for that?
Also...what’s everyone’s thoughts on beer being a fresh product? And there only being a small window of prime flavor...aroma...mouth feel? I’m ok with it. Chasing a lasting haze in a beer that may only be peak for a few days is a little counterintuitive to some degree.
At a side note.. Just wanted to throw this review in there for the No Oats / No Wheat discussion. Note the remarks of him that it misses that juicyness and creamy mouthfeel. Could be just their process is going down or the reviewer being palette fatigued but nonetheless an interesting observation.
This is a trillium beer made with
ABV: 6.8%
MALT: Pale Malt, Honey Malt, Victory Malt
HOPS: Mosaic