tester
New Member
Hi all,
I have a thread in the kit area where I started with 3 kits after a good 20 years absence to brewing. The 3 were MJ Mango IPA, MJ Grapefruit IPA, and Coopers Euro. I'm a canadian lager drinker so the IPAs were more for my wife who loves them. I don't mind a few of the local craft ones, but am fairly picky as I am not big on the big bitter finishes. One thing I have found with all 3, is they all have that bitter finish, with the Coopers being the least of course. After sitting for 2-3 weeks this has lessened considerably but is missing the 'skunkiness' I would expect from a euro lager.
But anyways, my questions are more on the IPA side. When I tried the 2 at about a week, they were weak on flavor, but very strong on the bitter finish. After leaving for a couple more weeks, they have tamed down considerably, but relatively meaning the flavor has dropped along with the bite.
We have a very good local IPA in the fridge, and I'd describe it (for this discussion) like a wave on a graph, with the initial flavor as a 5 out of 10, going to an 8 with citrus and floral flavors, going to a 5 at the end when the IPA bitterness finish takes over. Most craft IPAs I have tried here follow a similar profile with a flavor burst in the middle that has a hint of sweetness and lots of flavor, and just a hint of bitterness that is what is finally left as the flavor dissipates upon swallowing. However, both of these MJ's I would describe as 4-4-5. You actually have to concentrate and take a few sips to discern or describe any real fruit or floral flavor, of which there really isn't any. It's just not overly enjoyable, with the ending the most pronounced part of the swig... the part I like the least like eating a grapefruit peel.
So to salveage these, I think I will try a scoop of frozen concentrated fruit juice on the next pours to see how that goes. A local brewery adds juices to one of their IPAs and it turns out really nice.
But I have an MJ Session IPA here that I will do in the future. I'm wondering how I can brew this and get what I want, or if that is possible at home the traditional brew way. I want to go to the brewery we go to and ask the brewer there how they get the flavor punch as I am wondering if they filter the yeast, add juice, then force carbonate with a CO2 tank to preserve the recipe and not let the yeast change it any more..
- Do people add concentrated juices prior to bottling? I'd think the yeast would convert the sugar in that as well, so not sure what would be left.
- Would a different hops other than what MJ provides add more flavor? I don't want more bitterness.
- I tasted some of the canned malt with the Coopers Euro and that already had a bitterness to it.. Do the HOPS add much when they are added to the end? I always thought they were responsible for that but the coopers syrup made me question that.
I have a thread in the kit area where I started with 3 kits after a good 20 years absence to brewing. The 3 were MJ Mango IPA, MJ Grapefruit IPA, and Coopers Euro. I'm a canadian lager drinker so the IPAs were more for my wife who loves them. I don't mind a few of the local craft ones, but am fairly picky as I am not big on the big bitter finishes. One thing I have found with all 3, is they all have that bitter finish, with the Coopers being the least of course. After sitting for 2-3 weeks this has lessened considerably but is missing the 'skunkiness' I would expect from a euro lager.
But anyways, my questions are more on the IPA side. When I tried the 2 at about a week, they were weak on flavor, but very strong on the bitter finish. After leaving for a couple more weeks, they have tamed down considerably, but relatively meaning the flavor has dropped along with the bite.
We have a very good local IPA in the fridge, and I'd describe it (for this discussion) like a wave on a graph, with the initial flavor as a 5 out of 10, going to an 8 with citrus and floral flavors, going to a 5 at the end when the IPA bitterness finish takes over. Most craft IPAs I have tried here follow a similar profile with a flavor burst in the middle that has a hint of sweetness and lots of flavor, and just a hint of bitterness that is what is finally left as the flavor dissipates upon swallowing. However, both of these MJ's I would describe as 4-4-5. You actually have to concentrate and take a few sips to discern or describe any real fruit or floral flavor, of which there really isn't any. It's just not overly enjoyable, with the ending the most pronounced part of the swig... the part I like the least like eating a grapefruit peel.
So to salveage these, I think I will try a scoop of frozen concentrated fruit juice on the next pours to see how that goes. A local brewery adds juices to one of their IPAs and it turns out really nice.
But I have an MJ Session IPA here that I will do in the future. I'm wondering how I can brew this and get what I want, or if that is possible at home the traditional brew way. I want to go to the brewery we go to and ask the brewer there how they get the flavor punch as I am wondering if they filter the yeast, add juice, then force carbonate with a CO2 tank to preserve the recipe and not let the yeast change it any more..
- Do people add concentrated juices prior to bottling? I'd think the yeast would convert the sugar in that as well, so not sure what would be left.
- Would a different hops other than what MJ provides add more flavor? I don't want more bitterness.
- I tasted some of the canned malt with the Coopers Euro and that already had a bitterness to it.. Do the HOPS add much when they are added to the end? I always thought they were responsible for that but the coopers syrup made me question that.