Johnmorril
New Member
Hi again all,
I'm midway way through my 5th all-grain batch (currently part way through primary fermentation), trying to perfect a punchy, citrusy american pale ale.
Before this finishes and I then begin the dry hop I have a question about making my hops add flavour and aroma rather than bitterness.
My hop combinations in the past have always tended to focus on the big Cs (citra,columbus, centinnial) plus simcoe and amarillo. In the beginning I simply thought that adding a ton of hops in the dry hop phase would result in a really punchy, tropical pale ale but soon realised it was a more nuanced process than this.
I have since been trying to methodically add hops later during the boil and still pack plenty of punch with the dry hop, but I still fail to have these hops translate into a big tropical, citrusy finish. instead my beers are left with an aftertaste that is intensely bitter (although it mellows over time). Worth noting i dont believe it is just bitterness and other factors are probably coming into play.
long story short, before I dry hop I'd love to hear some tips on ensuring the hops add that big punch and continue to the finish (something like Siren's Soundwave or a Beavertown Gamma Ray / Neckoil) for those in the UK.
Details of current batch:
4.5 gallons
4kg extra pale malt
500g munich malt
boil (slightly wrong as only boiled for perhaps 40 mins at rolling boil) with ~15g each of amarillo and centenniall added FWH, 20 mins addition of 22g citra, 22g amarillo, 16g centennial, flameout additions of 33g citra, 22g amarillo, 15g cascade.
Thanks!
JM
I'm midway way through my 5th all-grain batch (currently part way through primary fermentation), trying to perfect a punchy, citrusy american pale ale.
Before this finishes and I then begin the dry hop I have a question about making my hops add flavour and aroma rather than bitterness.
My hop combinations in the past have always tended to focus on the big Cs (citra,columbus, centinnial) plus simcoe and amarillo. In the beginning I simply thought that adding a ton of hops in the dry hop phase would result in a really punchy, tropical pale ale but soon realised it was a more nuanced process than this.
I have since been trying to methodically add hops later during the boil and still pack plenty of punch with the dry hop, but I still fail to have these hops translate into a big tropical, citrusy finish. instead my beers are left with an aftertaste that is intensely bitter (although it mellows over time). Worth noting i dont believe it is just bitterness and other factors are probably coming into play.
long story short, before I dry hop I'd love to hear some tips on ensuring the hops add that big punch and continue to the finish (something like Siren's Soundwave or a Beavertown Gamma Ray / Neckoil) for those in the UK.
Details of current batch:
4.5 gallons
4kg extra pale malt
500g munich malt
boil (slightly wrong as only boiled for perhaps 40 mins at rolling boil) with ~15g each of amarillo and centenniall added FWH, 20 mins addition of 22g citra, 22g amarillo, 16g centennial, flameout additions of 33g citra, 22g amarillo, 15g cascade.
Thanks!
JM