Permalink Reply by MrC on December 28, 2008 at 7:30pm
A 30L brewcraft barrel and a 23L glass carboy.
I have another 30L barrel that I use as a bottling bucket (had a Barleywine in it until this arvo) and a 11.5L glass carboy currently hosting a mead (metheglin actually).
Yeah, I wouldn't think they're be any problems using a bigger fermenter (within reason I guess) I'd just rather have separate buckets for small batches so I'm not tying up my bigger ones. That way they're easier to store too when out of action.
de Joux Brew (IPA) - brewing as a thanks for a friend, who liked the last IPA which wasn't very bitter but very hoppy (90g Cascade dry-hop!), so looking at max 35 IBU.
5kg Pale malt
200g Light Crystal
200g Munich
100g Med Crystal
20g Black Patent (colour)
Now, this is where it gets interesting. Proposed hopping schedule is roughly this:
30g NZ Golding @ 60mins
20g NZ Cascade @ 30
20g Czech Saaz @ 30
50g Czech Saaz @ 5
20g NZ Golding @ 5
10g NZ Cascade @ 5
Comes out to a proposed 35 IBU with an OG of 1.055
Thoughts? (and yes, I want to use the 70g of Saaz I have sitting in the freezer)
I would take as much hop as you can and add it to your end additions and use your early additions to hit you required IBU's Just tasted my 70ibu Ameriacn IPA and it has less percived bitterness than my 30Ibu Golden. I find by adding all your hops at the end gives you huge, huge hop aroma and flavour, and a sharp yet non asstringent nor lasting bitterness, which I reacon you need for an IPA.
Reckon I use the golding for bittering, then move everything else up to the end?
Say:
45g NZ Golding @ 60
70g Saaz @ 5
40g Cascade @ 5
40g NZ Golding @ 5
As long as the Saaz has enough room to breathe... mmm, but I do love NZ Golding... and Cascade... maybe a little bit of Sauvin?! Hehehehe...