Late hopping/whirlpool hopping only in an IPA?
- jtmwhyte
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Late hopping/whirlpool hopping only in an IPA?
I'm thinking of using my base IPA recipe and doing centennial and citra additions only in the last 15 minutes and then cool to 175 Fahrenheit and steep a few ounces for 15 minutes or so. Thoughts? What differences can I expect in the hop flavours and bitterness?
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- GuingesRock
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Re: Late hopping/whirlpool hopping only in an IPA?
I think you'll like it. I've done lots of brews with late only(15 min or less). Try it and see. I just did a brew with late and hop stand just like you are proposing, but with Cascade. It turned out well. Greg Nash told me once something about studies saying late should be balanced with a bittering addition. Maybe he'll chime in.
I hope he won't mind me quoting him, but I thought it might be important.
I hope he won't mind me quoting him, but I thought it might be important.
I think it's a great idea to do things like late hopping and FWH in isolation, then you know what contribution they are giving. Then mix and match in future brews for a more complex/complete effect. My last IPA was FWH, Late, Hop stand & dry hop. I think it`s my best one yet.Okay so.... you really need to whack it with some early bittering hops IMO. If you want to nail it at the end with west coast flame-out hops that's well and fine if it's the route you want to go but you'll never get the balanced and integrated bittering it should have by hop-bursting only. Even on IPAs and the like it's been proven over and over that hop-bursting only doesn't provide desired results in the bittering and balancing department.
-Mark
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Re: Late hopping/whirlpool hopping only in an IPA?
I don't mind the quotation at all. 'Tis what it is, the only way you'll know for yourself is to go ahead and do it. Hop-bursting only doesn't make bad beer by any stretch, it just sort of leaves you wanting.
Off you go....
Off you go....
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Re: Late hopping/whirlpool hopping only in an IPA?
Greg, I've been watching the Heady Topper video LeafMan posted, and the guy (John Kimmich) doesn't like to boil hops because he says it produces a chlorophyl flavour, although from the discussions he may be using 5 min additions, if so he's boiling them a bit. He uses hop extract for bittering. Do you have any thoughts on that please? I think, in my optimistic way, that I might have been doing the same kind of thing a bit, as I do FWH instead of bittering additions and I skim all the FWH hops off the surface just as the wort is coming to the boil, and follow that up with late/flameout etc.NASH wrote:I don't mind the quotation at all. 'Tis what it is, the only way you'll know for yourself is to go ahead and do it. Hop-bursting only doesn't make bad beer by any stretch, it just sort of leaves you wanting.
-Mark
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Re: Late hopping/whirlpool hopping only in an IPA?
Skimming FWH out is wrong imo. You're certainly not getting much, if any bittering component out of them. Leave them in there. How many micro's do you think skim wort? I went through the homebrewing phase of skimming, and over-analyzing almost everything else to death. Then I went to school and became a professional brewer, these two things combined were a pretty huge enlightenment on which points are worth concentrating on, skimming isn't one of them. You know, most homebrewers strive to no end to make beer as good as their fav microbrewery, or some fabled brew from afar. You can bet the makers of said fabled brews aren't skimming, and the likelihood of you winning that bet are extremely high. You like my beer? I don't skim. If I did, nobody would notice. FWHing is a bittering technique. Those hops still need to remain in the boil for the duration to isomerize and thus extract alpha acids. If you don't leave them in for the boil you won't be getting much isomerization, so IBU calculations are out the window.GuingesRock wrote:Greg, I've been watching the Heady Topper video Leafman posted, and the guy (John Kimmich) doesn't like to boil hops because he says it produces a chlorophyl flavour, although from the discussions he may be using 5 min additions, if so he's boiling them a bit. He uses hop extract for bittering. Do you have any thoughts on that? I think, in my optimistic way, that I might have been doing the same kind of thing a bit, as I do FWH instead of bittering additions and I skim all the FWH hops off the surface just as the wort is coming to the boil, and follow that up with late/flameout etc.NASH wrote:I don't mind the quotation at all. 'Tis what it is, the only way you'll know for yourself is to go ahead and do it. Hop-bursting only doesn't make bad beer by any stretch, it just sort of leaves you wanting.
Off you go....
As for the chlorophyll, anything is possible. I'm just doing what brewers have done for centuries, adding bittering hops to wort
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Re: Late hopping/whirlpool hopping only in an IPA?
Thanks for the considered and informative reply.
Yes IBU calculations are out the window. Yes to most of it. But still one question in my head.
Mash hopping gives very little, or no bitterness, but at the higher pre-boil temperatures some isomerization is supposed to be going on. According to BS at 90C the isomerization is approximately 50% of the same time spent boiling the hops. My 14 gal takes so long to come to the boil on the stove that the wort might spend an hour or an hour and a half in a temperature range where some isomerization is happening. Again ...I'm probably being optimistic.
...but then you might say ...what's the difference between the hops spending time at 90C and time at 100C, and there probably isn't much, if any difference. The only thing I can think of is stewed hops are being cleared out when I skim just before the boil. Maybe the disturbance and commotion caused by the boil might extract more vegetal flavours, but it's getting more and more into fantasy land (the land of fabled brews from afar). It's been good to discuss this and get my head around it a bit more.
I was doing this long before I even heard of Heady Topper, but you did catch me out trying to emulate some "fabled brew from afar"
Yes IBU calculations are out the window. Yes to most of it. But still one question in my head.
Mash hopping gives very little, or no bitterness, but at the higher pre-boil temperatures some isomerization is supposed to be going on. According to BS at 90C the isomerization is approximately 50% of the same time spent boiling the hops. My 14 gal takes so long to come to the boil on the stove that the wort might spend an hour or an hour and a half in a temperature range where some isomerization is happening. Again ...I'm probably being optimistic.
...but then you might say ...what's the difference between the hops spending time at 90C and time at 100C, and there probably isn't much, if any difference. The only thing I can think of is stewed hops are being cleared out when I skim just before the boil. Maybe the disturbance and commotion caused by the boil might extract more vegetal flavours, but it's getting more and more into fantasy land (the land of fabled brews from afar). It's been good to discuss this and get my head around it a bit more.
I was doing this long before I even heard of Heady Topper, but you did catch me out trying to emulate some "fabled brew from afar"
-Mark
2nd place, Canadian Brewer of the Year, 2015
101 awards won for beers designed and brewed.
Cicerone Program - Certified Beer Server
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Re: Late hopping/whirlpool hopping only in an IPA?
What's the question? 

Transmitted from the Hop-phone.
Transmitted from the Hop-phone.
- jtmwhyte
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Re: Late hopping/whirlpool hopping only in an IPA?
So Nash, long and short I'd want to try to balance the bittering charge with the late additions in terms of IBUs?
Nova Prime Taproom
Tap 1: Festa Brew Scotch Ale
Tap 2:
"Fill with mingled cream and amber,
I will drain that glass again.
Such hilarious visions clamber
Through the chamber of my brain -
Quaintest thoughts - queerist fancies
Come to life and fade away;
What care I how time advances?
I am drinking ale today." ~ Poe
Tap 1: Festa Brew Scotch Ale
Tap 2:
"Fill with mingled cream and amber,
I will drain that glass again.
Such hilarious visions clamber
Through the chamber of my brain -
Quaintest thoughts - queerist fancies
Come to life and fade away;
What care I how time advances?
I am drinking ale today." ~ Poe
- GuingesRock
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Re: Late hopping/whirlpool hopping only in an IPA?
NASH wrote:What's the question?
Transmitted from the Hop-phone.
-Mark
2nd place, Canadian Brewer of the Year, 2015
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Re: Late hopping/whirlpool hopping only in an IPA?
I'm not saying that but it's not a bad idea.jtmwhyte wrote:So Nash, long and short I'd want to try to balance the bittering charge with the late additions in terms of IBUs?
I usually look at recipes in reverse by putting the quantity of finish hops I want in first and go from there. In a 70 IBU formulation I'd like to see at least 35-40 of those come from a bittering charge. Of those I'd dedicate about 30 IBU to FWH.
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Re: Late hopping/whirlpool hopping only in an IPA?
GuingesRock wrote:NASH wrote:What's the question?
Transmitted from the Hop-phone.Don't know
Transmitted from the Hop-phone.
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