I just brewed this triple hopped, hazy Double IPA, y’all! I’m just taking a silly jab there. I really don’t know what to call this beer. It’s hazy, it’s hoppy, it’s got a slight warming to it. Hey it’s beer! Brewed this beer with Henry and Brian. Henry found a recipe he liked and he tweaked it to his liking (mainly because we couldn’t find Galaxy hops that weren’t stupid expensive). Am I happy with it? It’s drinkable, and has become more drinkable everyday I pull some off the tap. When I first kegged it and pulled a sample a few days after kegging and dry hopping, but before it was carbonated, I was really concerned. I did some research on dry hopping in the keg and of course the Internet is right, am I right? You know since this post is on the Internet everything I write is true </sarcasm>. Ok, I’m done there, but anyways, I found that some people would get vegetal and grassy characters from dry hopping in the keg. By the way this is what I was perceiving I was not pleased at all. I pulled the keg out for about a week to hopefully extract some of those wonderful lupulin oils into the beer. Those qualities have seemed to have faded into the distance (whew!).
A few tasting notes on the beer. I think we have the malt profile down with this recipe. I want to put something other than 6 oz of Columbus into the whirlpool though. It is super earthy and dank, not the quality I was looking for in this beer. I wanted more fruit flavors in it. If I am to re-brew this I may use the same hop profile I used in the Wit Gone Indie recipe. Or another option is that I did buy a pound of Azaaca recently. It’s pretty bitter, as BeerSmith tells me it’s 110 IBUs. Woah! It’s not offensively bitter though and there isn’t too much malt sweetness to balance it out. The aroma of the beer is fantastic though. But how would you learn if you didn’t brew something you thought you couldn’t improve upon. Lesson learned. But this is not a bad lesson.
And another reason I’m having a bad relationship with this beer is oh my, what a brew day we had! Read my notes below on the massacre of a brew day it was. Not all brew days go well, do they? This one, well I was ready to break up once we were done.
Recipe Details
Batch Size |
Boil Time |
IBU |
SRM |
Est. OG |
Est. FG |
ABV |
11 gal |
60 min |
110.0 IBUs |
6.4 SRM |
1.090 |
1.023 |
9.0 % |
Style Details
Name |
Cat. |
OG Range |
FG Range |
IBU |
SRM |
Carb |
ABV |
Double IPA |
22 A |
1.065 - 1.085 |
1.008 - 1.018 |
60 - 120 |
6 - 14 |
2.4 - 2.9 |
7.5 - 10 % |
Fermentables
Name |
Amount |
% |
Pilsner Malt (Rahr) |
26 lbs |
68.42 |
Oats, Flaked |
4 lbs |
10.53 |
Wheat, Flaked |
4 lbs |
10.53 |
Caramel Malt - 20L (Briess) |
2 lbs |
5.26 |
Carapils (Briess) |
2 lbs |
5.26 |
Hops
Name |
Amount |
Time |
Use |
Form |
Alpha % |
Columbus (Tomahawk) |
2 oz |
60 min |
Boil |
Pellet |
17.8 |
Columbus (Tomahawk) |
2 oz |
10 min |
Boil |
Pellet |
17.8 |
Columbus (Tomahawk) |
6 oz |
30 min |
Aroma |
Pellet |
17.8 |
Nelson Sauvin |
8 oz |
0 min |
Dry Hop |
Pellet |
12 |
Citra |
4 oz |
0 min |
Dry Hop |
Pellet |
14.1 |
Mosaic (HBC 369) |
4 oz |
0 min |
Dry Hop |
Pellet |
12.3 |
Columbus (Tomahawk) |
2 oz |
0 min |
Dry Hop |
Pellet |
14 |
Miscs
Name |
Amount |
Time |
Use |
Type |
Calcium Chloride |
17.75 g |
60 min |
Mash |
Water Agent |
Epsom Salt (MgSO4) |
11.13 g |
60 min |
Mash |
Water Agent |
Gypsum (Calcium Sulfate) |
7.81 g |
60 min |
Mash |
Water Agent |
Baking Soda |
3.33 g |
60 min |
Mash |
Water Agent |
Yeast
Name |
Lab |
Attenuation |
Temperature |
London Ale III (1318) |
Wyeast Labs |
73% |
64°F - 74°F |
SafAle English Ale (S-04) |
DCL/Fermentis |
73% |
59°F - 75.2°F |
Mash
Step |
Temperature |
Time |
Saccharification |
152.1°F |
75 min |
Mash Out |
168°F |
10 min |
Notes
What an eventful brew day. Mashed in and there was absolutely no flow coming out of the mash tun. I back flush it with water. I got some flow, and then all of the sudden the flow stops. I try to get going again, let the wort settle down, no dice. We move the mash into one of the old igloo cooler mash tuns. Well, it doesn’t fit in the 10 gallon mash tun. AND! No flow out of that mash tun either!! UGH! I take apart the keggle converted mash tun to find that there is a HUGE amount of grain in the dip tube. UGH!! I see that the false bottom is bent pretty badly. I took a hammer to that thing and attempted to flatten it out. We then move the mash back into the keggle mash tun. BOOM WE HAVE FLOW! Then it comes to a dragging halt. WTF! Ok, Well, I throw my hands up. We’re at roughly 1.065, WAY off the 1.080 we should have been. I start draining the mash tun, then I put in all of the DME I had on hand which is roughly 21 ounces. After the pump seems to have finally pooped out, we scooped out all of the grain for Troy to use to make crackers with. I notice there is STILL a bunch of wort left in the bottom. I use a paint strainer bag in a 5 gallon bucket and we dump all of the wort and left over grain into it. Boom, we got roughly 2 more gallons of wort ouf of the mash that I wouldn’t have thought I got because the pump quit flowing.
Beer finished at 18 brix with 11 gallons of total wort |