There are many IPA recipes where the "theoretical" bitterness is significantly over 100IBU, even though it's pretty well understood that you can only actually get 100IBU in solution. My question is, aren't the bittering hop additions that bring it over 100IBU just a waste?
I'm aware that there must be *some* reason for doing this. I know Jamil Zanicheff talks about Pliny The Elder and how somehow the hop resins actually add to the mouthfeel. If you look at the Pliny recipe (https://www.homebrewersassociation.org/attachments/0000/6351/doubleIPA.pdf) you'll see that the 3.5 oz of Columbus at 90 minutes already gives you over 150 IBU.
So, what are the reasons? What do you get from bittering hop additions that are beyond the bitterness saturation point?
I'm aware that there must be *some* reason for doing this. I know Jamil Zanicheff talks about Pliny The Elder and how somehow the hop resins actually add to the mouthfeel. If you look at the Pliny recipe (https://www.homebrewersassociation.org/attachments/0000/6351/doubleIPA.pdf) you'll see that the 3.5 oz of Columbus at 90 minutes already gives you over 150 IBU.
So, what are the reasons? What do you get from bittering hop additions that are beyond the bitterness saturation point?