SEYMOUR LEGACY HOPPY WHEAT

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SEYMOUR LEGACY HOPPY WHEAT

Post by seymour » Sun Mar 08, 2015 2:38 pm

This is an experimental mini-batch using Legacy whole leaf hops, a newly registered Puterbaugh Farm/Hops Direct variety, shared by my pro-brewer friend Ehren. Described as "dual purpose hop with a clean grapefruit, floral, blackcurrant and spicy aroma", with 8.3% alpha acids. My Legacy hops had been stored awhile so I overcompensated a bit in case of deterioration.

In terms of beer style: this is a juicy American IPA except with big bready/nutty notes from Indian Fada and sturdy sweetness from so much CaraPils and dark crystal malts to support the intense New World hops. And I love the fruity/caramelly aspects of McEwans Scottish ale yeast for hoppy stuff like this.

My homemade invert syrup is a trick you've seen me do before. To make normal invert sugar, you simply boil any sugar with water then add a little acid to "invert" the sucrose into glucose and fructose, thus rendering it more easily fermentable, placing less stress on the yeast. What I do is similar: sometime during the mash when I'm just waiting around anyway, I bring a little water to boil, stir-in raw brown sugar or turbinado, corn syrup, molasses, honey, maple syrup...whatever, then I add a few drops of yummy lime juice. As it darkens and thickens, I cheat-in some heavy first-runnings from my mash/lauter tun to caramelize that too. Eventually I pour it all into the boil kettle, rinsing it with wort during the sparge. It's even easier than it sounds and definitely adds an extra layer of rich complexity. This "simple sugar" also helps thin the body in a husky grainbill like mine. 8% of fermentables will sound like a lot if you have negative opinions about adjunct brewing, but a half pound isn't excessive. In my opinion, this ought to be a tool in every homebrewer's belt.

It smelled amazing during the boil and my hydrometer sample was very tasty. High hopes.
SEYMOUR LEGACY HOPPY WHEAT
3.5 US gallons = 2.9 Imperial gallons = 13.2 Litres

GRAINBILL
59% = 3.7 lbs = 1678 g, Pilsener Malt (US)
18% = 1.13 lbs = 513 g, Fada Unmalted Wheat (India)
11% = .69 lb = 313 g, CaraPils/Dextrine Malt (US)
3.5% = .22 lb = 100 g, Cara 120L Malt (US)
.5% = .03 lb = 14 g, Aciduated Malt (Germany)
8% = .5 lb = 227 g, Dark Invert Syrup (homemade)
TOTAL: 6.3 lbs/2.86 kg

I used a MULTI-STEP MASH to maximize conversion of so much unmalted wheat:
140°F/60°C for 30 min
158°F/70°C for 50 min
Increase to 170°F/77°C, rest 10 min

I SPARGED to collect 4.5 US gal/5 Imp gal/22.7 L pre-boil

I BOILED for 90 min to drive off DMS from the Pilsener malt, adding a pinch of gypsum at beginning, Irish Moss at 15 min remaining.

HOPS
.3 oz = 8.5 g, Legacy, first wort addition, boiled the full 90 min
1 oz = 28.3 g, Legacy, 30 minutes remaining
1 oz = 28.3 g, Legacy, at flame-out, steep until chilled
1.7 oz = 48 g, Legacy, dry hops added 10 days before bottling
Total: 4 oz/113 g

YEAST
McEwans Brewery ale strain
(Scotland), available as Wyeast 1728 and White Labs WLP028.

APPROXIMATE STATS
OG: 1052
FG: 1012
ABV: 5.3%
IBU: 65
COLOUR: beautiful orange golden amber with white foam and lace

Here are some crappy pics taken with my phone:

Measuring the ingredients:
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Drill-powered Corona grainmill:
Image


Water treatments, hops, yeast starter:
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Making the dark invert syrup:
Image


Vorlaufing before sparging, check-out this great colour:
Image


Sparging:
Image


Measuring the hops:
Image


Ready to ferment:
Image


Original gravity = 1052:
Image

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Re: SEYMOUR LEGACY HOPPY WHEAT

Post by timbo41 » Sun Mar 08, 2015 4:30 pm

Yumm ....... That's all. Surprised the invert didn't darken the overall brew more than is apparent though....it looked like tar!
Just like trying new ideas!

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Re: SEYMOUR LEGACY HOPPY WHEAT

Post by seymour » Sun Mar 08, 2015 4:53 pm

timbo41 wrote:...Surprised the invert didn't darken the overall brew more than is apparent though....it looked like tar!
I agree, but that's what I've consistently found. Even the darkest, thickest sugar syrup I can make, when used for 5-8% of the grainbill weight never darkens the overall brew as much as I'd expect.

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Re: SEYMOUR LEGACY HOPPY WHEAT

Post by timbo41 » Sun Mar 08, 2015 6:03 pm

Well the brew looks great..another question on the invert though. If a batch was made and left to cool would it be a rough equivalent of belgian candi ? Can any sugars be used ie molasses, golden syrup( tate and lyle comes to mind readily available in uk) treacle
Its an interesting way of making crystalline forms
Just like trying new ideas!

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Re: SEYMOUR LEGACY HOPPY WHEAT

Post by seymour » Mon Mar 09, 2015 12:03 am

timbo41 wrote:Well the brew looks great..another question on the invert though. If a batch was made and left to cool would it be a rough equivalent of belgian candi ? Can any sugars be used ie molasses, golden syrup( tate and lyle comes to mind readily available in uk) treacle
Its an interesting way of making crystalline forms
I sometimes make large batches of invert syrup and use only a little at a time in batches. It definitely thickens when it cools, but it never hardens all the way. I'm not sure what it takes to harden it into Belgian candi sugar (I've read Belgian farmhouse brewers used strings dragged through beet sugar syrup in the olden days but I'm sure it's more mechanized these days). But it doesn't really matter, since it all performs chemically the same in the brew once dissolved anyway.

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Re: SEYMOUR LEGACY HOPPY WHEAT

Post by seymour » Wed Mar 11, 2015 2:23 am

Here's some more info I culled from the internet:
LEGACY HOPS

Origin:
Yakima Valley, Washington State, USA. Grown at Puterbaugh Farms since 1963, but only recently registered and trademarked by Hops Direct, LLC. Descendent/variant of Cluster?

Aroma/Flavor:
Black currant, grapefruit, orange, lemon, black pepper, blackberry, grass, tea, roses. Much more intense than noble hops.

Alpha Acid:
7.8 – 8.4%

Typical Usage:
Dual purpose

Beer Styles:
APA, IPA, American Brown Ale, Robust Porters, American Stouts, anywhere some wild notes are welcome.

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Re: SEYMOUR LEGACY HOPPY WHEAT

Post by seymour » Fri Mar 20, 2015 7:25 am

Several days ago I racked it to a secondary fermentor with lots more Legacy dry hops. It's hard to tell from this pic, but the gravity measured 1014.

Image

Despite 18% of the grainbill being unmalted, I'm pleased with such a high grain efficiency and fermentable wort. The airlock started bubbling occasionally again after the transfer. Still loving this bright orange colour.

It's already hoppy as all hell, so I don't think I'll dry-hop it for long. I'm sure it would taste great kegged, but I think I'd like to bottle-condition this batch.

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Re: SEYMOUR LEGACY HOPPY WHEAT

Post by seymour » Fri Apr 10, 2015 1:19 am

I bottled this over a week ago, but am only now updating this post. I usually let things bottle condition for a month, but wanted to get to this while the hoppy aromas are super-fresh.They are already carbonated enough to enjoy, and I can't really stop myself anyway.

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I had stopped dry-hopping for years because it's such a pain in the ass. I lose so much beer to absorption...the hops gunk up my siphon and bottling process...are difficult to remove from the carboy...but now I'm reminded why we bother. Damn, this is really tasty. I shared some at the homebrew club meeting last week with brewers I respect, and got a lot of positive feedback. They love these Legacy hops too, describing citrus but not exactly grapefruit, most of them described lime and lemon, strong mint essence, with a lot of other unclassifiable fruit-salad-ness, faint black pepper spice, but despite so much complexity still very smooth and balanced overall. Such a cool hop variety.

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Re: SEYMOUR LEGACY HOPPY WHEAT

Post by seymour » Sat Jun 06, 2015 3:06 pm

Image

Only a couple bottles left, but this is still drinking really nice. I wish I had another 5 gallons right now. The super-fresh hop aromas have subsided, naturally, but that just brings the crisp grainy mouthfeel forward, and it still has a great fruity hoppy flavour balance, with a refreshingly dry finish. I'll definitely brew this again, and possibly use the grainbill as a basis for other hop trials.

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