What are the differences among Flameout, Whirlpool and hopstand when . . . When the boiling is finished, there are three terms explain different ways of adding hops: Flameout, Whirlpool and hopstand What are the differences among them in terms of how to conduct and the purposes Thank you very much :)
Dry Hopping - optimal time? - Homebrew Talk I generally end up leaving my dry hop additions in for a week I try to time it out where theres still some fermentation taking place to minimize some of the oxygen On my normal work schedule, I tend to brew on thursday friday, and end up dry hopping on Monday or Tuesday, but unable to package until the following week due to shift rotations
Best hops for bittering only - Homebrew Talk Hi guys! Title says it all, what is your favourite bittering, 60 min addition hop? I guess high alpha and low cost would be best What are the "state of the art" bittering hops? Thanks, M
which hops are suitable for english bitter? - Homebrew Talk That hop is not typical for the style, but I used it in my first ever batch because it was all I could get at my LHBS It turned out very well, so I had no qualms about adding it again The wort going into the fermenter tastes promising, it has a lillte bit of spicey bite from the Mt Hood
Timing my Dry Hopping Cold Crashing - Homebrew Talk Hey all, About to dry-hop a NEIPA I've read that dry hopping for 3-4days produces the wanted benefits while avoiding grassy off-flavors from dry hopping for too long How does cold crashing factor into this? If I dry hop for 4days and then cold crash for 2days, do I risk unwanted flavors
Dry Hopping West Coast IPA - Homebrew Talk Hop creep and diacetyl are not issues I have noticed in my beers I seldom take a pre-dry hop gravity reading, but if diacetyl was an issue I would think somebody would have noticed it Maybe I am lucky or maybe something in my process mitigates the issue??
Pine Flavored Hops - Homebrew Talk OK, what hop in your opinion has the most PINE like aroma flavor for dry hopping? One of my beer drinking buds wants me to make an IPA with a huge pine nose and flavor aroma I want to sock it to him! I'm used to using Simcoe, Citra, Palisade, Amarillo, CTZ, Horizon and the like mainly for dry
Dry hopping and the 5 to 7 day rule - Homebrew Talk The suggestion is to add hops 5-7 days into fermentation, then 5-7 days dry hop time Adding roughly half way through the typical primary fermentation The first 5-7 is to ensure the fermentation has slowed enough that CO2 bubbles won't carry the hops flavor away The 5-7 day dry hop period is to ensure you don't keep the hops in too long, as they may contribute "grassy" off-flavors There is
Hop Selections for German Pils - Homebrew Talk I agree that if you are going for a German, Pils, to use German hops (not Saaz, which is more appropriate for a Czech pilsner) I do a lot of German Pilsners, and generally bitter with either Spalt or Tettnang, and a late hop addition (10 min in the boil) of Hallertau Hallertau is a region, not a hop I assume you mean Mittelfrüh?
Dry Hopping : Hops and yeast at the beginning of fermentation . . . The earliest I've dry hopped is just after peak fermentation Many here have worried that hop aroma pouring out of air locks and blow-off tubes means less aroma (and flavor?) in the beer Given the strong aroma, there's at least some loss, notwithstanding the volatility of oils Some aromatics found in hops apparently have greater volatility than others Perhaps the loss isn't large?