The recipe was adapted from one I got off the Brewing Network podcast, The Jamil Show, which had an American brewery Lagunitus brewer on the show, where he detailed their IPA recipe. I tried this beer in California earlier this year and it's absolutely amazing! Blew my socks off!!
The mash on this one is a bit nuts, at -> 71C <- and it uses the Fullers yeast which I've liked brewing with before so thought I'd give the recipe a crack
For the record here's the recipe from the show....
23L OG 1.060 FG 1.019
4.95Kg 2 row pale malt
0.6Kg Munich malt
0.4kg Wheat malt
0.37kg caramel/crystal 10L
0.25kg crystal 60L
Mash at wait for it..... 71C
BOIL
60 min 4g Summit 18.5% + 10g Horizon 12%
30 min 11.5g Centennial 10%
30 min 23g Williamette 4.75%
80C Steep cascade 5.8%
Ferment 19C until 85-90% atten (~4 days), then rise to 21C over a few days
Yeast WLP002 (Fuller's)
When bright, yeast <1mil/ml, dry hop 21g cascade, 21g centennial
Rouse after 2 days
Crash to 5C after 2 days
Bottle after 1 week
Here's my adapted recipe for what I could get my hands on easily. Subbed Lager malt for the 2 row. Couldn't get any summet or horizon, and didn't want to get a whole load of williamette as well just for 20g in this brew, leaving me with cascade and centinnial throughout, apart from a small amount of fuggles as a williamette sub.
GRAIN
4.2kg Lager malt (instead of 2 row)
.6 munich
.6 pearl pale (to use it up)
.4 wheat malt
.35 caramalt (to replace 10L crystal)
.25 crystal
HOPS
90min FWH 12g cascade 6.3% + 12g centennial 11.7%
30min 15g fuggles 3.6% (instead of williamette - was aiming to use 30g but I only had 15g when it came to it, so put extra centennial to compensate)
30min 17g centennial
80C steep 30g cascade
90 min mash
90 min boil
Expected OG 1.063
Expected FG 1.020
Yeast: cultured from Fullers 1845
Here are the pics before I get into the mess of it all. Only took a few in the quiet spells I'm afraid


Mashed in, hit 70C instead of 71C but I was happy with that

First cockup. pH was low at 4.9. Not sure why. Followed Graham's calculator, to get 2:1 on auto mode, adding gypsum, CaCl + NaCl, and used CRS to get to 20CaCO3 which I checked it before and after. Dont understand at all why it when it ended up so low - any ideas???


New pump making its debut. What a beauty it is! Well chuffed with it. So much so that I decided to try out fly sparging instead of the batch sparge I used in AG1. It went pretty well and the pump worked v well for this.

Recirculated for 15 minutes after the 90 min mash (prob a bit long, don't really know) which helped clear it up a lot.

The cockup with the sparging came with my hot liquor tank (doubling as the boiler). I'd made a relay circuit thingy controlled by my ATC800+ temp controller, so I could use it to control the kettle element despite it being of a higher current rating than the ATC800 can handle. The switch worked well in testing, but when it came to the crunch, it kept popping the fuse for the kitchen electrics as well as its own fuse. Drove me up the wall as kept loosing power, meaning the pump would start sucking back, drawing air in, and the sparge temp would drop. Had me running about like a nutter. Not sure why it didn't really work out, but best saved for another post.

Oh, and I totally hadn't sorted out the fittings to connect the to the different vessels. Pissed quite a bit of water and wort at various hand burning stages all over the floor.

The 90min boil went well (sorry no pics) I think. Rehydrated the irish moss for about 30 mins before I used it. Added gypsum to the boil also.
Cooled to 80C with IC, added aroma cascades, waited 30mins, then crashed to 25C. It was full of break material, so rested for 30mins but still found it was very merky. So I slowly recirculated with the pump for 15 mins. Didnt help at all, drained it slowly into a bucket to make the most of the hop filtering, and then into FV quickly to aerate.
Here's the puzzling part.....
I measured the gravity after the mash and it was bang on. BeerSmith predicted 1.053 and I got 1.035@65.2C which comes to 1.053@21C, for the required boil volume of 26.5L (topped up 2L from tap, which I had prob lost to the floor in the pump fiascos) - Brilliant I thought.
Once in the fv I measured it to be just 1.055@23C. And I only collected 20L, not the 22L of 1.063 I was aiming for.

How do I get a lower gravity AND a lower volume?!!! Absorption of sugars by the hops?

If anyone has got any clues here it would be much appreciated.
The yeast I used was cultured up from Fullers 1845: 140ml for 2 days, 500ml 2 days, 2L 2 days, the pitched it on brewday
It's fermenting nicely this evening. Nothing much this morning, but a good head on it this evening.

Shame it's going to be lower alcohol than intended. Is sensible to consider increasing this using sugar/spray malt and adding the extra 2L ??
