60g at flame out reduced to 50g and the dry hop upped to 60g.
Also will only use 1 sachet of yeast for this brew.
Looking forward to this

Cheers Tom
Congrats, here's hoping it turns out great!soupdragon wrote:Well it's in the fermenter...
It's almost certainly just the California Ale/Sierra Nevada/Chico/US-05 strain. If so, the answer is yes, we've all got experience with it. It'll be a high-attenuating and very neutral fermentor, letting the hops do the talking which is what you want here.soupdragon wrote:...It's my first time using Rob's West Coast style yeast. I hope it behaves itself. Has anybody got previous with this yeast?
I predict it'll perform identically. That said, who cares? Clarity is overrated, and clarifying agents scrub-away some of your precious hops character too. But if a little haze bothers you, then you should always add a little Irish Moss to the boil kettle with about 15 min remaining.soupdragon wrote:I hope it settles a bit quicker than us-05
Gotcha, that makes sense. I still think you'll be very happy with the way this beer turns out. Cheers!soupdragon wrote:I use Protafloc in the boil. A bit of haze doesn't bother me. I don't use and finings apart from the Protafloc, it's just the amount of sediment that ends up in the keg that's a bit of a pain. I'm probably being a bit too fussy but I'd feel happier kegging something that's at least started to clear down.
I did this. It's not for the faint hearted...soupdragon wrote: Maybe use 400g in a brew just for the hell of it.