With the homegrown hops ready for harvest, it's time for a Harvest IPA. In this, I load it up with tons of fresh hops - something you can only do this time of year. Last year, I only got nugget hops, but it turned out ok. This year both the nugget and cascade plants are producing, so I am excited to see how it turns out.
While putting together the recipe, I was drinking the last of my German lager, which had a nice malty flavor from Munich and Vienna malts. I wanted to give this beer a little bit of that, so I included a pound of each. Hopefully it is just enough to balance the hops and not overpower the beer.
I like more hop flavor without over the top bitterness, so I decided to add all of the hops in the last 20 minutes. This also let me do a short boil (1/2 hour) which really helped because I brewed this the same day as a 10 gallon batch of dark.
I first put the recipe together with 1oz hop additions, but since fresh hops are 70-80% water, this version includes 4x as much hops (by weight). This came out to about 2 full solo cups for each hop addition. In the end, I strained 1-2 gallons of used hops from the wort.
Recipe: 5 Gallon batch
Fermentables:
10# 2-row malt
1# Vienna malt
1# Munich malt
1# cara pils
1# cane sugar
Mash 1 hour @ 152F
Hops:
4oz fresh nugget (20)
4oz fresh cascade (15)
4oz fresh nugget (10)
4oz fresh cascade (5)
4oz fresh nugget (flame out)
4oz fresh cascade (flame out)
4oz fresh cascade (dry hop)
Boil additions:
Whirlfloc (15)
Yeast:
Fermentis US-05
Notes:
Brewed on 8/26/12 staggered after the dark beer
With the short boil and extra water from the hops, I ended up with 6 gallons of 1.058 wort. Weaker than planned, but I do get an extra gallon of final proeduct.
Fermented at ~70F in swamp cooler.
Will rack to secondary and dry hop after 1-2 weeks
It will sit in secondary for 1 week before going into the keg. I want to drink this one fresh.
Showing posts with label Hoppy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hoppy. Show all posts
Saturday, September 1, 2012
Saturday, July 14, 2012
Zythos Pale Ale
With the success of my Zythos IPA, I decided to use most of the remaining hops for a lighter pale ale version to serve on July 4th.
I based the recipe off of the IPA, lowered the alcohol a bit, adjusted bittering hops to match and changed a few things based on what I had on hand.
This was kegged and ready just in time for our July 4th BBQ. I was hoping it would have cleared up more by then, but it still had chill haze. Good thing we served in red plastic cups :)
Brewing:
Recipe here
The brew day was reletively uneventful. Gravity was a hair under what I wanted, but still OK. I used 4 ounces of Zythos hops in the boil, and one each dry hop and keg hop. Original Gravity: 1.045, Final Gravity: 1.005. ABV: 5%
Tasting:
It has finally cleared up and looks great, though I might like it a little lighter.
A nice hoppy aroma with citrus fruitiness. The flavor is similar with a nice balance. Definitely not too sweet or bitter, which makes it nice and drinkable. The light body helps here too. The carbonation is a little high, which is the only thing keeping me from from chugging it.
Overall:
I do like this beer, but am not sure if I will brew again. In the lighter beers, people seem to preffer more malt/less hops. I will focus my hoppy efforts on the stronger IPAs.
I based the recipe off of the IPA, lowered the alcohol a bit, adjusted bittering hops to match and changed a few things based on what I had on hand.
This was kegged and ready just in time for our July 4th BBQ. I was hoping it would have cleared up more by then, but it still had chill haze. Good thing we served in red plastic cups :)
Brewing:
Recipe here
The brew day was reletively uneventful. Gravity was a hair under what I wanted, but still OK. I used 4 ounces of Zythos hops in the boil, and one each dry hop and keg hop. Original Gravity: 1.045, Final Gravity: 1.005. ABV: 5%
Tasting:
It has finally cleared up and looks great, though I might like it a little lighter.
A nice hoppy aroma with citrus fruitiness. The flavor is similar with a nice balance. Definitely not too sweet or bitter, which makes it nice and drinkable. The light body helps here too. The carbonation is a little high, which is the only thing keeping me from from chugging it.
Overall:
I do like this beer, but am not sure if I will brew again. In the lighter beers, people seem to preffer more malt/less hops. I will focus my hoppy efforts on the stronger IPAs.
Thursday, May 31, 2012
Zythos IPA - Tasting
I love the way this beer turned out. My goal was strong citrus American hop flavor without too much bitterness. I did originally plan it to have higher alcohol, but it is ok where it ended up. I do not expect this keg to lay too long, which is ok because these IPAs are best fresh. This weekend, I will be brewing a lighter pale ale version of this.
Links: Recipe Brewing
The beer is this pretty copper color with great clarity. I think I will stick with using a secondary. It helps to drop the yeast out before I get it into the keg.
The aroma is all hops. American citrus type hops.
For the most part, the flavor matches the aroma, hoppy goodness. There is a little malty sweetness to help balance.
The beer is quite drinkable, especially for a 7.5%abv beer. It has this thirst quenching quality to it. I could drink it by the quart.
Notes:
4/7/12 - Brewed - OG=1.061 (Poor efficiency)
4/22/12 - Secondary G=1.005 + 1 oz Zythos dry-hop
Hazy, but not too yeasty. Some hop aroma, good hoppy flavor.
5/10/12 - Keg Zythos IPA FG=1.004 ABV=7.5%
+ 1oz Zythos keg-hop
Initial tasting - Soft with pleasant hop flavor with a hint of "Soapy" Low bitterness
So far, I have not had any issues with the keg hops. I didn't do anything special, just tied up 1oz of pellet hops in a mesh Baggie and threw them in.
And a thank you to Keith for the perfect mug to drink this beer from!
Saturday, April 7, 2012
Zythos IPA - brewing
I thought it was about time to make something hoppy. Over the last 6 months, I have been making malty, roasty or sour beers. With such a long break from hops, I wanted this one to be big. As I was putting the recipe together, I decided to focus more on the citrusy side of American hops, but I soon found out that all of the good ones are sold out until the next harvest (early fall). What I did find was the hop bled from hop union called Zythos. It is apparently a blend of quite a few American hops. I ordered a pound of this and worked 1/2 of that into this recipe. 6 ounces in the boil and 2 more for dry hopping. I needed a malt bill that can stand up to that much hop flavor.
I started with a base of standard 2 row, a pound of caramel 80 (I happened to have some I wanted to use up) another pound of cara-pils and a pound of sugar to top it off. The goal is an ~8% abv beer. Full recipe here. Also with 6oz hops in the kettle, you lose quit a bit of wort, so I planned this as a 6 gallon recipe and will hopefully end up with 5 in the keg.
For today, I wanted to keep it simple and focus just on this one beer. I didn't start the water or crushing the grains until after 9am and I had the chiller going in time to make it to the farmer's market by 12:30. For the most part, the day went smoothly although during the boil, there was some boil over, but strangely no wort escaped, it just pushed all of the hops out. I scooped them back in and kept the fire going. Everything looked like it was going well, but when I checked the gravity, it was much lower than expected. 1.061, which means I only got 60% efficiency. Depending on where it finishes, I may have a 6.5% beer. Not quite as big as I was hoping, but will still be OK.
My daughter really liked sampling the sweet wort. I may have to start making some non-alcoholic malt beverages.
I then used a half gallon of the final runnings to top off my sour cultures and set a couple out in an attempt to capture wild yeast. We will see how that goes...
I started with a base of standard 2 row, a pound of caramel 80 (I happened to have some I wanted to use up) another pound of cara-pils and a pound of sugar to top it off. The goal is an ~8% abv beer. Full recipe here. Also with 6oz hops in the kettle, you lose quit a bit of wort, so I planned this as a 6 gallon recipe and will hopefully end up with 5 in the keg.
My daughter really liked sampling the sweet wort. I may have to start making some non-alcoholic malt beverages.
I then used a half gallon of the final runnings to top off my sour cultures and set a couple out in an attempt to capture wild yeast. We will see how that goes...
Location:
Croton-on-Hudson, NY, USA
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