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Question on hop pellet flavor

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Eddiebosox

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So I finally finished my latest IPA all grain and it still has this nagging problem I’ve been trying to pinpoint. The maltiness is great, the bitterness is just right and I have found a great yeast strain to complement the style. But I can’t for the life of me get that powerful hoppy grapefruit punch that I get from a good commercial IPA. I can only think that it’s the pellets. They give of some hop aroma and flavor when I open them but not much, and I beleive they give the beer this distinctive aftertaste. Its not a bad aftertaste, but its noticeable. I've bought hops from a variety of sources and used all sorts of citrusy versions but this issu remains. Ive even overhopped it with 5 minute additions to no effect (it actually gave it a thick almost resiny taste from overhopping, but no real increase in hop aroma or flavor).

Will leaf hops fix my problem? Or hop oil? I am going for that big hoppy punch that you’d get from something like a Loose Seas Heavy Cannon. It so far eludes me.
 
I was looking at the hop descriptions on freshops.com,& they say the Summit (dwarf) "robust citrus notes of orange,tangerine,& grapefruit". Sorachi Ace "with it's powerful lemon aroma",Cascade "flowers,citrus & spice with grapefruit the noticeable fragrance". Amarillo with a" flowery citrus like aroma". Hope that helps some.?...
 
I made Jadeddogs all Amarillo IPA with pellets and it is a grapefruit bomb. Been in the keg 3 weeks and still has a great aroma.
 
You're either getting old hops, improperly stored hops, the wrong hop variety, or you just aren't using enough. There's absolutely nothing with the pelletization process that's going to make the pellets inferior (in fact, utilization for pellets is usually considered to be a wee bit better than for whole hops).
 
Certainly doesn't sound like a pellet issue. You can make extremely hoppy beers with pellets.

You mention 5 minute additions. Are you doing dry hopping? If not, try that. Make an IPA with the hop of your choice and dry hop with an ounce or so for 7 days. Lots of American hops work great for this. Amarillo, Crystal, Cascade, Chinook, Centennial, Simcoe etc etc. Use pellets or whole hops.

Try something like this, for a 5 gallon or so batch of IPA, using the hop of your choice.

Bittering addition to reach IBUs.
10 min. addition- 1 oz.
5 min. addition- 1 oz.
0 min addition- 1 oz.
dry hops, 7 days- 1 oz.
 
Bittering addition to reach IBUs.
10 min. addition- 1 oz.
5 min. addition- 1 oz.
0 min addition- 1 oz.
dry hops, 7 days- 1 oz.

+1 to this. I'll sometimes up the dry hops to 2 oz, especially if I'm using more than one variety. Make sure your ferment is done, and that's where I get a lot of my aroma. Depending on how quickly you cool, those dry hops are sometimes crucial. Before I got my chiller and was using a water bath, I feel like even my flameout hops were lacking from losing some of the aroma.
 
You mention 5 minute additions. Are you doing dry hopping? If not, try that. Make an IPA with the hop of your choice and dry hop with an ounce or so for 7 days.

Exactly what I was thinking. Take 2 oz or so of your flavoring hops and toss'em in the primary with 5-7 days left, or secondary onto'em if you prefer.
 
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