Wez said:Thanks for posting that cc
Does the coriander come through much?
A T said:Yea it is an interesting looking recipe but why 2 Tablespoon Irish Moss and why at 30 mins?
ccsueIPA said:A T said:Yea it is an interesting looking recipe but why 2 Tablespoon Irish Moss and why at 30 mins?
I am working towards a level clarity - I know most wait till the last 15 mins but this was a recommendation from a good friend - so I gave it a go.
A T said:ccsueIPA said:[quote="A T":ij71qamt]Yea it is an interesting looking recipe but why 2 Tablespoon Irish Moss and why at 30 mins?
I am working towards a level clarity - I know most wait till the last 15 mins but this was a recommendation from a good friend - so I gave it a go.
Aleman said:First bit of controversy from me . . . . its not an IPA
IPA were pretty much all pale malt, and goldings/fuggles
This is an American Pale Ale . . .Looks like an interesting beer though If cascades and spices are your thing . . . . they just don't do it for me
ccsueIPA said:Aleman said:First bit of controversy from me . . . . its not an IPA
IPA were pretty much all pale malt, and goldings/fuggles
Maybe I should have given it the label "American" IPA - would that somehow make it less controversial? It is in fact an IPA. Or at the very least, this is my version of an IPA and that is what makes home brewing so much fun and rewarding.
Aleman said:ccsueIPA said:Aleman said:First bit of controversy from me . . . . its not an IPA
IPA were pretty much all pale malt, and goldings/fuggles
Maybe I should have given it the label "American" IPA - would that somehow make it less controversial? It is in fact an IPA. Or at the very least, this is my version of an IPA and that is what makes home brewing so much fun and rewarding.
The label you give it tells the drinker what to expect . . . Deuchars IPA is not an IPA, Victory Hop Devil is not an IPA. IPA's had bags of malt and for export were massively hopped, with the traditional varieties of hop (Goldings and Fuggles). According to Amsinck in Practical Brewing OG's would have been in the range 1.060 - 1.075 and hopping rates upwards of 6 and 1/2lbs per barrel (with a 12-18 month maturation period :shock:) . . . Of course English Pale Ales (Effectively the same beer but less aggressively hopped) were hopped at around 3 1/2 lbs per barrel. Modern American Pale Ales (For America does have a tradition of brewing fine Pale Ales in the late 1800s- prohibition) are aggressively hopped big bitter beers that are traditionally ( ) drunk young, and cannot compare to a traditional India Pale ale
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