Think I’m going for single Apollo and
I’m going to go for a pale ale with a small amount of crystal as suggested.
But with a twist . A litre of frozen grapefruit juice in at flame out .
Hopefully this will tease out the grapefruit citrus at dry hop .
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Finished making a Centennial IPA earlier. Mashed slightly cool at 64°C, in the hope of fermenting down below 1.020. Chilled with the wort recirculating until it dropped to 65°C before starting to fill the FV, came through at 22°C and pitched immediately. Got nearly 24l in FV, although with a lot of cold break. Hit my O.G. bang on at 1.062. Will transfer to secondary next weekend and dry hop a week later.
All cleaned up now and enjoying a pint of my Kolsch, which is drinking quite nicely now.
Time is all it needs. The yeast from Boon should get the gravity very low, with time. Ale should should finish around 4 to 4.5 pH using Saccharomyces. Your Boon dregs and Yoghurt Lactobacillus should take it to 3 to 3.5 pH, but this may take months. So it looks like both the yeast and bacteria are only part way through the job.just sampled my sour.....
Amazing! - a bloody miracle! - ph4 - tastes sharp and apple-y.
one snag is that it's at 1.035 which gives 4.2% - i've no idea what a sour can get down to, does it need a high attenuating yeast to get it down further?
Time is all it needs. The yeast from Boon should get the gravity very low, with time. Ale should should finish around 4 to 4.5 pH using Saccharomyces. Your Boon dregs and Yoghurt Lactobacillus should take it to 3 to 3.5 pH, but this may take months. So it looks like both the yeast and bacteria are only part way through the job.
What IBUs is the brew? Souring bacteria don't always perform well in the presence of hops. And yeast doesn't always perform well in the presence of lactic acid. A Saison yeast will drop the gravity a bit quicker though.
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