Patrick87
Well-Known Member
Someone gave me a 46oz can of pineapple juice (from 100% juice, not concentrate) and I was wondering if I could use it in an IPA with tropical hops (Citra or Mosiac for example) with good results?
Here's the Nutrition Facts on the can:
If I've done the math right, there appears to be 6.16oz of what I assume to be simple sugars that yeast can ferment.
I usually add about a half pound of table sugars to my IPAs. Do you think I could just replace some of the table sugar with pineapple juice? I would compensate for the "water" volume to start with.
If most all the sugars are fermentable, do you think it'll carry any appreciable pineapple flavor over to the finished beer?
From my research, it seems that pineapple juice has a PH of around 3.5. In a 5.75 gallon batch, I wouldn't think that would acidify the beer too much, right? (46oz in a 5.75gal batch) I'm brewing extract, btw.
Any problems with it being fortified with Vitamins A, C & E?
I would think that the safest way to to add it would be at flame-out, right before my 1 hour hop stand to ensure it gets re-pasteurized.
Anyone have any input?
Here's the Nutrition Facts on the can:

If I've done the math right, there appears to be 6.16oz of what I assume to be simple sugars that yeast can ferment.
I usually add about a half pound of table sugars to my IPAs. Do you think I could just replace some of the table sugar with pineapple juice? I would compensate for the "water" volume to start with.
If most all the sugars are fermentable, do you think it'll carry any appreciable pineapple flavor over to the finished beer?
From my research, it seems that pineapple juice has a PH of around 3.5. In a 5.75 gallon batch, I wouldn't think that would acidify the beer too much, right? (46oz in a 5.75gal batch) I'm brewing extract, btw.
Any problems with it being fortified with Vitamins A, C & E?
I would think that the safest way to to add it would be at flame-out, right before my 1 hour hop stand to ensure it gets re-pasteurized.
Anyone have any input?