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American IPA West Coast-ish IPA/Pale ale

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I brewed a slight variation on the OP recipe this past weekend. Only change is doubling the late addition of Citra/Mosaic to suit my palate. I will also be dry hopping with 2oz each after day 5.

OG was 1.060 so should be in my ideal Pale to IPA ABV territory. Will post back in 3 weeks with photo and tasting
 
Latest rendition. US05 (pictured) is way cleaner. SO4 keg is about kicked. Very proud of this beer. Kegged 7/27/22. US05 about to kick too 👀
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I brewed a slight variation on the OP recipe this past weekend. Only change is doubling the late addition of Citra/Mosaic to suit my palate. I will also be dry hopping with 2oz each after day 5.

OG was 1.060 so should be in my ideal Pale to IPA ABV territory. Will post back in 3 weeks with photo and tasting
How'd it turn out? I dropped all Crystal malts from the recipe, and I'm liking the results.

Current recipe is 2 Row, Munich and carafoam. Fantastic beer, but it needs more color, IMO. Clean as a whistle though!
 
I just bought some Gambrinus Honey Malt to use in place of the Munich/Vienna. Will add it at the 12% of grist. All the rest the same except for hops where I use Chinook, Amarillo, Cascade, Citra, Mosaic mix. Any one try this Honey malt this way?
 
I just bought some Gambrinus Honey Malt to use in place of the Munich/Vienna. Will add it at the 12% of grist. All the rest the same except for hops where I use Chinook, Amarillo, Cascade, Citra, Mosaic mix. Any one try this Honey malt this way?
Personally, I would not add that much honey malt in any recipe, let alone a Pale Ale, but go for it! Never know unless you try it! The Munich in place of the Crystal is delightful.
 
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I just bought some Gambrinus Honey Malt to use in place of the Munich/Vienna. Will add it at the 12% of grist. All the rest the same except for hops where I use Chinook, Amarillo, Cascade, Citra, Mosaic mix. Any one try this Honey malt this way?
Waaaaaaaay to much honey. Don’t exceed 5%
 
How'd it turn out? I dropped all Crystal malts from the recipe, and I'm liking the results.

Current recipe is 2 Row, Munich and carafoam. Fantastic beer, but it needs more color, IMO. Clean as a whistle though!
You liked the Munich better than Vienna? Did it stand out more with no crystal
 
You liked the Munich better than Vienna? Did it stand out more with no crystal
Munich was maltier than Vienna alone. Munich without Crystal stood out more than Vienna and Crystal together.

To me Crystal gives more of a fake malty sweetness, and Munich is a drier malty flavor, if that makes any sense.
 
I’ll add to the thread that I know for a fact most of current best breweries are putting out 100% Pilsner wcipa or 95% Pilsner 5% character. Had a really awesome convo with one of the best in the hop game and he models his after a huge name west coast brewery that they’ve collab’d with and that’s the current trend in the style.
 
I’ll add to the thread that I know for a fact most of current best breweries are putting out 100% Pilsner wcipa or 95% Pilsner 5% character. Had a really awesome convo with one of the best in the hop game and he models his after a huge name west coast brewery that they’ve collab’d with and that’s the current trend in the style.
Good stuff. I shared this beer with a local brewery that we had our beer meeting at last Wednesday, and it won beer of the night. The head brewer/owner says he thought it came right from a commercial tank. The feedback was almost overwhelming!
 
I’ll add to the thread that I know for a fact most of current best breweries are putting out 100% Pilsner wcipa or 95% Pilsner 5% character. Had a really awesome convo with one of the best in the hop game and he models his after a huge name west coast brewery that they’ve collab’d with and that’s the current trend in the style.

Slice & North Park brewers discuss all/nearly pils malt in their wcipa in recent podcast interviews. You folks see the North Park recipe in recent CB&B issue?

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Good stuff. I shared this beer with a local brewery that we had our beer meeting at last Wednesday, and it won beer of the night. The head brewer/owner says he thought it came right from a commercial tank. The feedback was almost overwhelming!
That’s awesome man! I know plenty of breweries that don’t make beer as well as you!
 
That’s awesome man! I know plenty of breweries that don’t make beer as well as you!
It was insane. I poured him a glass, and he grabbed it and walked away to pour more beer for guests. He smelled it and turned around and was like, "Holy s%$! Whose beer is this? Who gave me this?!" Everyone got quiet and I raised my hand, and he said it tasted like it came from a commercial tank. I was shocked but extremely psyched.

It's less West Coast in IBU than most other WCIPA, but I wanted to paint the picture of it being more amber and more bitter than a NEIPA. If you crank the IBU up to about 70, it would fit right in. I'll get there, but I'm still experimenting with the recipe. I'll probably drop a lb of 2 Row and add in another lb of Munich. Or maybe some Biscuit/Victory.
 
Good stuff. I shared this beer with a local brewery that we had our beer meeting at last Wednesday, and it won beer of the night. The head brewer/owner says he thought it came right from a commercial tank. The feedback was almost overwhelming!
Well congrats on that. I don’t know if I’d like all pils as another suggested but this sounds good. I find Vienna bready and Munich malty sweet so either is good depending on what you like. I made a 2-row pale ale recently with a bunch of Columbus and zero crystal and loved it.
 
Well congrats on that. I don’t know if I’d like all pils as another suggested but this sounds good. I find Vienna bready and Munich malty sweet so either is good depending on what you like. I made a 2-row pale ale recently with a bunch of Columbus and zero crystal and loved it.
I tend to agree. I'm sure it would turn out fine, but I think a 50/50 Pils 2 Row would be a good place to start.

I need to try Columbus and the other Cs in this recipe. Hoping to pick up some Cascade tomorrow!
 
I brew a WC IPA at a smaller commercial level, and use 86% Weyermann Extra Pale Premium Pils and 14% Weyermann Vienna. 6% ABV, 60 IBU, 4 SRM, Chinook and Simcoe at all stages, mash water is adjusted to around 200 ppm CaSO4, 80 ppm CaCl2, 120+ ppm Ca, mash pH 5.4. I dislike crystal malts in anything where hops are showcased. Vienna malt is in there to slightly adjust the colour, but I will definitely go lighter with the next recipe. There is really no breadiness or maltiness to speak of in this beer.

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I think 100% Pilsner malt would be fine, probably better than adding Vienna, Munich, Crystal malts, etc.
 
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I’ll add to the thread that I know for a fact most of current best breweries are putting out 100% Pilsner wcipa or 95% Pilsner 5% character. Had a really awesome convo with one of the best in the hop game and he models his after a huge name west coast brewery that they’ve collab’d with and that’s the current trend in the style.
Sorry to derail OP - I love WCIPA, probably my favorite style. I recently brewed the Green Cheek West Coast IPA is Dead clone from Craft Beer and Brewing. It's 100% pils which I was nervous about it being too thin, so I did 95% Pils and 5 % Carafoam and it's absolutely amazing. The malt holds up to the heavy hoping no problem, and none of that weird caramel/candy sweetness you get from adding crystal malts.

I'm going to do 100% Pils next time.

I think with the higher ABV (7.2%) it creates a really nice sweetness/mouthfeel that holds up to heavy hopping rates.
 
My house WCIPA has both Vienna and Munich in it. I ferment it with 007 and still love the recipe. I get your love for the Munich. I remember when Sierra used to brew Anniversary Ale. Man that brew was fantastic. That beer made me use Munich in my recipe. It started w crystal and it followed your moves. I know I’ve brewed it 20 times. I enjoy some Haze, but really love WCIPA. Just finished a Stone 😍while I typed.
 
My house WCIPA has both Vienna and Munich in it. I ferment it with 007 and still love the recipe. I get your love for the Munich. I remember when Sierra used to brew Anniversary Ale. Man that brew was fantastic. That beer made me use Munich in my recipe. It started w crystal and it followed your moves. I know I’ve brewed it 20 times. I enjoy some Haze, but really love WCIPA. Just finished a Stone 😍while I typed.
Thanks for the feedback. This recipe is still a work in progress, but it produces quite an easy drinker! I love Munich in the grist. Forget the crystal lol. I'm going to make this again with more Munich. Then I'll start experimenting with DHing.
 
My original that dates back to 2011 had 15% Vienna and 17% Munich. I won multiple golds with that, when it was easier to win.
My next batch I just weighed has 8% Munich and 6% Vienna. Once I reduced these, I never won again. Maybe there is something to more Munich.
 
My original that dates back to 2011 had 15% Vienna and 17% Munich.
Interesting, I always felt they were pretty similar. Sounds like a lot in total but can't say for sure as I haven't tried it.

I do feel like my Pale Ales tend to do better with no Munich, keep them cleaner. But IPA's tend to taste better with some Munich in them, 10 - 15% is about where I've landed. I try for a little more maltiness to balance out the additional hops. A little more crystal in the IPA as well (40L, not 60 or higher). I'm not saying all beers are this way or that anyone should do this, but it's become my preference.
 
Brewed up yet another version of this 10/6/2022 with Magnum for bittering and Simcoe in the boil. Still no dry hop. Fermenter smells great. Hoping to keg next week. This beer is becoming a staple in my keezer <3

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The Simcoe has been in the keg since last Thursday, and it's TASTY. A little pine, but very citrusy. Can't say for certain if I prefer it to the Citra/Mosaic version, but the base beer recipe is fantastic. So versatile.
 


Check this video out for some great info if you haven't seen it already. Backs up the heavy pils malt bills. I've brewed a few based on this and it's been really good.
 
I brew a WC IPA at a smaller commercial level, and use 86% Weyermann Extra Pale Premium Pils and 14% Weyermann Vienna. 6% ABV, 60 IBU, 4 SRM, Chinook and Simcoe at all stages, mash water is adjusted to around 200 ppm CaSO4, 80 ppm CaCl2, 120+ ppm Ca, mash pH 5.4. I dislike crystal malts in anything where hops are showcased. Vienna malt is in there to slightly adjust the colour, but I will definitely go lighter with the next recipe. There is really no breadiness or maltiness to speak of in this beer.

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I think 100% Pilsner malt would be fine, probably better than adding Vienna, Munich, Crystal malts, etc.
Hahahaha, if I wouldn't know better, I'd say that you've copied my concept of a nice IPA. This is almost 100% the way I would have brewed this ... Although, I probably would have used 20-30% Vienna. But the rest would be exactly the same. My favourite hop combo!
 
Hahahaha, if I wouldn't know better, I'd say that you've copied my concept of a nice IPA. This is almost 100% the way I would have brewed this ... Although, I probably would have used 20-30% Vienna. But the rest would be exactly the same. My favourite hop combo!

Might´as well be just that... I've sampled enough WC IPAs, to have a feeling about what I would like to brew and sell to people. Sure, hazy IPAs are still the first choice for many, but I've managed to brew this beer since July last year and it still sells, which tells me that are still lots of beer drinkers, that will have a West Coast. Regarding Vienna malt: I'm a fan, especially in a Vienna Lager or anything malty. In retrospect, I think I could've dropped it altogether. I now believe in using light/very light base malts for anything IPA.
 

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