Hop Juice IPA underway

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Seveneer

Hop Juice IPA underway

Post by Seveneer » Sat Jul 21, 2007 2:20 pm

Hi Guys,

I'm in the middle of brewing an IPA. The recipe is as follows...

For 10 gallons

16kg Pale Malt
200g Fuggles (AA 5%) 90 minutes
250g EKG (mixture of AA 4.2% and 5%) 90 minutes
50g EKG (AA 4.2%) at flame out
Protofloc at 15 minutes
Yeast - Nottingham

OG 1.070
114 IBU's

Mashed at 66C for 90 minutes then raised to 72C for mash out.

450g of hops in the boiler is a lot of hops 8)

No pictures, too busy stirring hops :lol:

Looking to age this for 6 months at least but that very much depends on patience :roll:

/Phil.

prodigal2

Re: Hop Juice IPA underway

Post by prodigal2 » Sat Jul 21, 2007 2:36 pm

Seveneer wrote: No pictures, too busy stirring hops :lol:


/Phil.
What with a pitch fork :lol: :lol:

Are you going to put the whole brew in cornies or are you going to put a bit in some bottles for a comparison?

Seveneer

Post by Seveneer » Sat Jul 21, 2007 2:38 pm

:lol:

I'll keg it all at first then bottle half after a few weeks. The bottles will stand a better chance of surviving my lack of patience and immense thirst :wink:

/Phil.

AT

Post by AT » Sat Jul 21, 2007 3:01 pm

Seveneer wrote::lol:

I'll keg it all at first then bottle half after a few weeks. The bottles will stand a better chance of surviving my lack of patience and immense thirst :wink:

/Phil.

:D :D :D

prodigal2

Post by prodigal2 » Sat Jul 21, 2007 3:10 pm

Seveneer wrote::lol:

I'll keg it all at first then bottle half after a few weeks. The bottles will stand a better chance of surviving my lack of patience and immense thirst :wink:

/Phil.
I must admit it easier to ration your stores with bottles...........well towards the end that is :wink:

Enjoy the brew day and keep us informed, a good IPA is a thing of beauty :)

BigEd

Post by BigEd » Sat Jul 21, 2007 3:14 pm

That looks very nice indeed, Seveneer. Reminds me a bit of the Meantime IPA. Good luck with the session and let us know how it turns out. Cheers!

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Post by Andy » Sat Jul 21, 2007 3:42 pm

Sounds really good Phil! Must pop round for a brewday soon 8)
Dan!

Seveneer

Post by Seveneer » Sat Jul 21, 2007 5:15 pm

DaaB wrote:Nice one Phil, did you have a lot of old hops you needed to use up or something :lol:
No, I've been buying up the stocks of fuggles and EKG whenever I've been to the shop in Farnborough for a while now. To tell the truth, I'd have used more hops if I'd had them but all I had in stock was what's in the recipe plus some northdown, target and a pack of cascade that I don't particularly like but thought I'd give them a go sometime.

Andy, you are welcome to come over and brew any time.

The brewday went well. Used my plate chiller for the first time. Cooled 11 gallons down to 28C in about 50 minutes. Not bad but I'd have liked it to go lower. I'll probably use it in cooperation with an IC and recirculate it next time.

Hit my numbers pretty well. CRS and DLS ensured mash pH of 5.2 through mash and sparge. 11 gallons at 1.070 in the fermenters. It makes the efficiency look good but actually I stuck a little more malt in than the recipe called for and stopped sparging at 1.025 :shock: I don't worry about efficiency these days, malt is cheap :lol:

The HERMS worked very well indeed. In fact better than I've seen it work since I made the single tier stand 8) The grain bed remained floating and didn't even begin to sink as can happen when you start recirculating.

I let the mash sit at 66C for an hour and a half then used the HERMS to raise the mash bed temperature to 72 for mash out. Worked like a charm 8)

I've found that the HERMS is superfluous when you're mashing 16kg of grain. The thermal mass is so big you don't lose a single degree over the 90 minute mash time even without insulation. Best leave it be then use the HERMS for mash out and clarification 8)

So there you have it, 11 gallons of IPA now cooling further in the chest freezer. When the wort gets down to 22C I'll pitch the yeast and aerate. Then all I have to do is wait until Christmas before drinking it :roll:

/Phil.

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Post by Andy » Sat Jul 21, 2007 5:37 pm

Seveneer wrote:Andy, you are welcome to come over and brew any time.
Excellent, perhaps in a couple of weeks then 8)
Dan!

AT

Post by AT » Sat Jul 21, 2007 5:55 pm

I like this idea, add about a kg more than your recipe suggests and stop sparging early meaning a better quality beer and never having to worry about efficiency :D

Vossy1

Post by Vossy1 » Sat Jul 21, 2007 7:41 pm

I've found that the HERMS is superfluous when you're mashing 16kg of grain. The thermal mass is so big you don't lose a single degree over the 90 minute mash time even without insulation. Best leave it be then use the HERMS for mash out and clarification
Very interesting :wink:

Glad the brew went well 8)

Seveneer

Post by Seveneer » Sat Jul 21, 2007 11:51 pm

Andy wrote:
Seveneer wrote:Andy, you are welcome to come over and brew any time.
Excellent, perhaps in a couple of weeks then 8)
No problem, Andy. A couple of weeks to see this one out of the freezer and I can feel a big Durden Park beer coming up 8)

/Phil.

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Post by mixbrewery » Sun Jul 22, 2007 8:17 am

Seveneer wrote:I let the mash sit at 66C for an hour and a half then used the HERMS to raise the mash bed temperature to 72 for mash out. Worked like a charm .
Did you set your PID @ 72 to mashout and how long did it take to get from the 66 to 72?
Check out the beers we have for sale @ Mix Brewery

Seveneer

Post by Seveneer » Sun Jul 22, 2007 9:01 am

Yep, PID set to 72C and it took about 15 minutes to get there from 66C. Not bad for a 16kg mash 8)

/Phil.

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Post by Andy » Sun Jul 22, 2007 9:21 am

Seveneer wrote:
Andy wrote:
Seveneer wrote:Andy, you are welcome to come over and brew any time.
Excellent, perhaps in a couple of weeks then 8)
No problem, Andy. A couple of weeks to see this one out of the freezer and I can feel a big Durden Park beer coming up 8)

/Phil.

8)
Dan!

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