gotcha. ya whirlpooling is just stirring the whole volume.I don't whirlpool today. so it was a process question of what to do without a pump. As for chill, I use an immersion chiller and it gets to 180 pretty fast this time of year.
gotcha. ya whirlpooling is just stirring the whole volume.I don't whirlpool today. so it was a process question of what to do without a pump. As for chill, I use an immersion chiller and it gets to 180 pretty fast this time of year.
I don't whirlpool today. so it was a process question of what to do without a pump. As for chill, I use an immersion chiller and it gets to 180 pretty fast this time of year.
FWIW, at one point in time (Jan 2013) the SN web site listed Magnum & Perle as bittering hops for SNPA.not sure that the perle belongs in this recipe??
I've always used city water filtered through a whole-house filter and campden tablets. You can get R/O water from the supermarket dispensers pretty reasonably and that would be an option.Suggest building from distilled or my house source?
interesting i would not have guessed that to be honest.FWIW, at one point in time (Jan 2013) the SN web site listed Magnum & Perle as bittering hops for SNPA.
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web.archive.org/web/20130115212747/http://www.sierranevada.com/beer/year-round/pale-ale/
Whirlpool/HopstandThanks. One question about whirlpool. I don't have a pump. At boil temps a stir should be fine. At 180? Might be a dumb question but want to get as close as I can.
Agree 100 percent. American Pale Ale as a style is sort of defined by a more restrained use of hops than an IPA. In every regard the styles overlap by a lot but to me, an IPA is defined by substantial whirlpool/dryhopping additions whereas a traditional Pale Ale (which may have very similar OG and ABV to the IPA) will have mostly or only boil additions and as a result a less defined hop presence in aroma and in general, less strident hop presence in the flavor and less bitterness.I would think that an SNA style beer wouldn't need much if any hopstand hops.
Thanks!! I will take everyone's feedback and brew this weekend.Agree 100 percent. American Pale Ale as a style is sort of defined by a more restrained use of hops than an IPA. In every regard the styles overlap by a lot but to me, an IPA is defined by substantial whirlpool/dryhopping additions whereas a traditional Pale Ale (which may have very similar OG and ABV to the IPA) will have mostly or only boil additions and as a result a less defined hop presence in aroma and in general, less strident hop presence in the flavor and less bitterness.
My thought process was mainly that the whirlpool hop addition adds a significant aroma and flavor component without adding bitterness. In my mind it rounds out the hop profile of the beer without being overly bitter. not that a 25Ibu bittering addition wont be very bitter on its own. SNPA is very old school beer recipe in general.Agree 100 percent. American Pale Ale as a style is sort of defined by a more restrained use of hops than an IPA. In every regard the styles overlap by a lot but to me, an IPA is defined by substantial whirlpool/dryhopping additions whereas a traditional Pale Ale (which may have very similar OG and ABV to the IPA) will have mostly or only boil additions and as a result a less defined hop presence in aroma and in general, less strident hop presence in the flavor and less bitterness.
When I brew a Hazy, I get my bitterness from whirlpool additions, no boil hops. Time and temperature...My thought process was mainly that the whirlpool hop addition adds a significant aroma and flavor component without adding bitterness. In my mind it rounds out the hop profile of the beer without being overly bitter. not that a 25Ibu bittering addition wont be very bitter on its own. SNPA is very old school beer recipe in general.
at the end of the day, there is no wrong answer.
Or Else !Good luck with it
We do expect to hear, what you did differently, what you thought of the results, and where it goes from here.
Yeah, or else!Or Else !![]()
It's the least I can do for all of your help.Yeah, or else!
Or else what though, I don't know
Or else we turn him on to Kveik yeast and learn the true power of fast fermentationsYeah, or else!
Or else what though, I don't know
Too damn windy and cold here in north Florida to brew this weekend. I will get to it mid week.Good luck with it
We do expect to hear, what you did differently, what you thought of the results, and where it goes from here.
sure, that would just be a very very expensive batch if i was only relying on whirlpool additions. Also i call my IPAs Juicy not hazy. there is a fairly large difference between the two in my opinion. My juicies are hazy, but they are not hazy ipas??? does that make any sense? I have gone the full whirlpool and much prefer adding something in the 10-15 min range just for the balance of the flavors.When I brew a Hazy, I get my bitterness from whirlpool additions, no boil hops. Time and temperature...