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Opinions on my IPA hop schedule

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jtp137

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I don't make that many ipa's with a lot of flavor and aroma was thinking on this schedule for a 1.065 og and 64 ibu. The following schedule equates to 64 ibu

0.5 oz chinook 50 min
1 oz mosaic 1 oz of citra 10 min
0.5 oz citra 0.5 oz mosaic 5 min
0.5 oz citra 0.5 oz mosaic 0 min
2 oz citra dry hop

I am looking for more flavor and less harsh bitterness, should I add a 20 or 15 min addition.
 
If you don't want harsh bitterness, try a smooth bittering hop like Magnum.

Personally, I'd up the dry hops - but I'm a hophead. I find that 3-4 oz in the 15-0 minute range and 3-4oz dry hop give about the hop levels I've come to expect in a good commercial IPA.
 
More late hops. Try for 4 ozs in the last 15 minutes.

I like to cool the wort to 175 F before I add the 0 minute hops and let them sit (stirring occasionally) for 30 minutes before cooling down.
 
+1 for Calder. I usually do a 3 oz hopstand at 175 for 30 min and a 3 oz dry hop for 5-7 days. Otherwise, set your IBUs with the earlier hops. The hopstand and dry hops are all about flavor and aroma and add almost no actual IBUs.
 
Something I've found pretty good is use like the other poster Said a neutral bittering hop like magnum for say 20-25 ibus then ramp up your hop additions from 15 to 5 min and then do a 1-2oz hop stand for 30-45 min. You'll have the bitterness but the magnum won't really impart a lot of flavor when you have the majority of your ibus in the flavor and aroma stages.
 
I generally try to get around half of my IBUs from a FWH, usually with Magnum like other people have mentioned. The other half I get solely from a 10 minute hop stand after flameout and when cooled to around 180F. For comparisons sake, I'm brewing an IPA tomorrow with 6.5oz in the whirlpool and probably 4-5oz dry hop.
 
Those of you putting in over 4 oz of late hops is that for Ipa or double ipa

Either, really. All it does is add a ton of hop flavor without adding much bitterness. I use it for my APA's as well, or any really any style that I want any hop flavor to come thru (saisons, a hoppy pilsner, etc).
 
I generally try to get around half of my IBUs from a FWH, usually with Magnum like other people have mentioned. The other half I get solely from a 10 minute hop stand after flameout and when cooled to around 180F. For comparisons sake, I'm brewing an IPA tomorrow with 6.5oz in the whirlpool and probably 4-5oz dry hop.


How do you estimate IBU contribution at a 180F whirlpool. Doesn't seem like you would get a lot at that temp and time
 
Good tips. I would definitely move the 50min addition to FWH, and I also would use warrior or magnum, though I do see people occasionally recommend citra (I haven't tried it myself). I have used chinook for my bittering addition, and it has a strong flavor.

I like the timing of the additions in the rest of your schedule, and those are good hop choices, but I would make changes. The 10min addition is huge. I would cut it to an ounce (or even less for such high AA% hops). I totally agree with adding a whirlpool (1oz or more). I find the whirlpool doesn't have to be massive, and I basically try to split my IBUs 50/50 between bittering and late additions. Still, a whirlpool is a nice technique to add. Finally, I generally make my dry hop addition 3oz, but I've gone higher. I think there's some diminishing return here. 3oz seems to do the trick, and more can be better, but I find the difference between 3 and 5oz is somewhat small. You'll see differing opinions on this, so maybe try both over time.
 
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