Chuckus95
Well-Known Member
I'm to a point where I'm staying away from Crystal malts in my IPAs. When I do a lighter color IPA, I go with:
93% 2-Row
5% Victory
2% Honey Malt
93% 2-Row
5% Victory
2% Honey Malt
I'm to a point where I'm staying away from Crystal malts in my IPAs. When I do a lighter color IPA, I go with:
93% 2-Row
5% Victory
2% Honey Malt
I just formulated my recipe to
89.7 % 2 ROW
5.2% Vienna
5.2% carapils
What is honey malt?
of those 4, vienna is the lightest.What's the lighter of the malts between victory, vienna, and munich, light munich....anything else ?
I just formulated my recipe to
89.7 % 2 ROW
5.2% Vienna
5.2% carapils
If you want to go a little darker (around 7-9 SRM), add a bit more complexity, but still have the hops shine, I like the following grain bill:
71.4% 2-row
14.3% Vienna
3.6% Honey Malt
3.6% CaraRed
3.6% Carapils
3.6% Turbinado Sugar
Here is what I would do:
1oz warrior at 60,
1oz each cascade, simcoe, citra at 5/0
1oz each citra in Summit @ 180 for a 30min Hop Steep
Dry hop with the rest
Here is what I would do:
1oz warrior at 60,
1oz each cascade, simcoe, citra at 5/0
1oz each citra in Summit @ 180 for a 30min Hop Steep
Dry hop with the rest
FWH with a couple ounces too!
a couple ounces? Won't it be too bitter?
I pretty much agree with everyone...
Warrior (or Magnum or Millennium) scream bittering hop addition.
Citra is great (as a very late addition or dry hop) so split it 50/50 between dry and flameout.
I dry hopped with Falconer Flight before and loved it. It is a blend of hops already so I think you might have a few too many variates. (not saying it can't be done but it may just be wasted or muddy up the hop character)
I did a similar beer and put the Amarillo in at 10 minutes. I could not tell it was even in there. Maybe it added some complexity but Simcoe would be a lot more prominent.
So, that's my 2 cents... much the same as the others but maybe keep the Amarillo, Summit and Cascade for another day.
A couple ounces? Won't it be too bitter?
I cold crash my primary(glass Carboy) just remember to remove the airlock. You can double dry hop this way also. Once in the primary, cold crash, in the secondary, cold crash(or not on the second one)
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Newb AG here. Why remove the airlock when cold crashing???? I plan on dryhoping in my primary bucket for 5 days in muslin bags, do I still need to A) cold crash and if so remove the airlock too. I do have a 5 Gal glass carboy, better to rack to that and dry hop after 14 days, cold crash then bottle. With my setup I transfer with an autosiphon so the less hop mess to worry about the better. Sorry for thread jack.
Haha, that's better. I was about to reply and suggest that 2 oz of hops in an IIPA might be a touch light...
That sounds good! I have a ton of homegrown cascades and centennial to use up, and a friend gave me a pound of citra. I think I see a "Three Cs" type of beer coming. Make sure you let us know how it comes out in the end!
About dryhopping- while you can certainly dryhop any time you'd like, generally you get the most out of it if you package immediately after dryhopping. In other words, dryhop last.
If you're going to transfer, age, add finings, etc, I'd do that all first and dryhop for the last 3-7 days right before bottling. Hops aromas are the very first thing to fade, so dryhopping and then aging the beer a week or two before bottling gives a bit of time for the aroma to already start dissipating.