rewster452
Well-Known Member
If you over dry hop you'll get an asston of aroma, which could be off-putting. If your ABV is over six percent, aging will make it beautiful again. Obviously don't age it on the hops.
It all depends on how strong/bitter you want your SMaSH to be. Assuming 70% efficiency 10 lbs would put you at pale ale strength while 15 lbs would put you up close to low double IPA strength. 3-4 oz is about right for the low end of that range, Id use more like 5-6 if you aim for the high end.
Im not a big fan of continuous hopping since it wastes (in my view) a lot of hops in the middle of the boil. For hoppy beers I tend to skip mid-boil addition and go with just an early bittering addition followed by a big dose at the end of the boil (then dry hop).
Sounds like a good combination, hope it turns out well. Welcome to the board.
Just bottled this batch. Yielded 25 bottles and my 2L growler. Ended up dry hopping an ounce in the primary for five days and another ounce in the secondary for another five days. So far this beer tastes AMAZING! I'm pumped for it to carbonate!
Ps, my birthday was sunday and my girlfriend got me a refractometer!!! Infinitely better than my hydrometer
Just bottled this batch. Yielded 25 bottles and my 2L growler. Ended up dry hopping an ounce in the primary for five days and another ounce in the secondary for another five days. So far this beer tastes AMAZING! I'm pumped for it to carbonate!
Ps, my birthday was sunday and my girlfriend got me a refractometer!!! Infinitely better than my hydrometer
Hey there, I had a quick question for you. Considering your stance on doing early bittering additions and then big doses right at the end - do you find that your hop aroma/flavor fades quickly or does it stick around for a while?
I like your mindset and I want to try it with the next pale ale I do (skipping the midboil additions), but I did read some stuff on here the other day where a fellow brewer was saying that the 15,10,5 minute additions were more stable & when they had tried to just do bittering early and a big dose at the end, it was great when first tapped but some of the flavor & aroma changed and faded quickly. Have you had any similar experiences? P.S. love your blog.
coypoo said:I did a session beer where I only did a 60 min addition then flame out and dry hop. The hop aroma was amazing at the start, but it did fade after time (about 8-10 weeks IIRC). The thing that I did notice though, was there was not a "smooth" tranistion from the 60 min bittering addition flavors to the flameout/dry hop flavors. I seemed to taste a nice bittering charge and then nothing in the middle, then the late hops. I am going to try to make the same beer again and add just a very small addition at about ~30 min to see if that helps smooth things out
I'm going to have to agree. This beer has great bitterness and aroma, but absolutely nothing in the middle
I'm still relatively new to homebrewing (this will be batch 5) and I recently discovered this awesome smash idea. I couldn't find any solid recipe on here, so estimating from other recipes I plan to use:
10-15lbs Vienna malt
3-4oz Cascade pellets
How's this rough recipe sound? I plan on using the continuous hopping technique from Yoopers dfh 60 min clone.
If you over dry hop you'll get an asston of aroma, which could be off-putting.
Ok. So. . .
12lbs Vienna
2oz cascade 60 min
.5 oz cascade 30 min
2.5 oz cascade 10 min
2 oz cascade dry hop 7 days
Is that enough hops for the dry addition to make a nice hoppy impact?