If you have any problems with the registration process or logging in, please contact us.

Home Brewing Discuss, Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA recipe at Alcohol Reviews forum; Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA This recipe has been floating around the internet and several magazines lately. It continues to ...



Go Back   Alcohol Report > Alcohol Reviews > Home Brewing

Post New Thread  Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
Old August 8th, 2007, 07:54 PM   #1
Blaydeman
I'm the MoFo Snowman!!!
 
Blaydeman's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Washington
Age: 22
Posts: 13,830
Send a message via AIM to Blaydeman Send a message via Yahoo to Blaydeman
Default Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA recipe

Quote:
Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA

This recipe has been floating around the internet and several magazines lately. It continues to be in high demand so I'm adding it to my collection. The addition of Amber/Brown Malt in this recipe contributes more to a suttle roast flavor but little of the sweetness you might expect in a beer of amber color. The hop additions to this recipe are not your normal boil/flavor/aroma additions. In the 90 minute boil you will be adding 1/4 ounce of hops every 8 minutes followed by another 2 ounces of hops added to the secondary fermenter or keg (dry hopping). If this recipe seems confusing, you are probably doing it right.

8 lbs Light Dry Malt Extract

1 3/4 lb German Pilsner Malt

1 3/4 lb Brown (amber) Malt 35 L

2 oz Amarillo Hops 16 HBUs

3/4 oz Simcoe Hops 8 HBUs

1/2 oz Warrior Hops 8 HBUs

1 oz Amarillo Hops -Dry Hop

1/2 oz Simcoe Hops -Dry Hop

1/2 oz Warrior Hops -Dry Hop

Wyeast British Ale Yeast

For Bottling: 1 1/4 cup Dry Malt Extract Or 3/4 cup Corn sugar

Partial Mash:

Add the cracked, Pilsner Malt and Brown Malt to 1 gal of 170º water. This combination of grain and hot water (mash) will drop in temperature to 150º. Let the mash sit for 1 hour at 150º. Sparge (rinse) the grain with 2 1/2 gals of 170º water and collect run off into the boil kettle.

Boil:

Add to the boil kettle, 8 lbs. of Dry Light Malt Extract and bring to a boil. Watch out for boil overs. In a separate bowl, mix together 2 oz. Amarillo hops, 3/4 oz. Simcoe hops, and 1/2 oz. Warrior hops. For the next 90 minutes, boil the wort while adding 1/4 ounce of the hop mixture every 8 minutes. Sparge the hops with cold water into the fermenter. Add the wort to the fermenter with cold water to make 5 gals. Add yeast when the temp reaches 70º. Ferment at 70º for 7 days or until fermentation slows. Rack to a secondary fermenter.

Dry Hopping:

Add the dry hop combination into the secondary fermenter using a hop sack. Let it age 1 weeks in secondary then bottle or keg

If you keg your beer, add the dry hops into keg instead of the secondary.

For bottling, use 1 1/4 cup of dry malt extract or 3/4 cup of corn sugar boiled with 2 cups of water added in the bottling bucket.
Blaydeman is offline   Reply With Quote
Advertisements
Old August 8th, 2007, 07:55 PM   #2
Anthony
Super Moderator
 
Anthony's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Philadelphia
Age: 22
Posts: 23,973
Default

I would be interested to see how it compares.
Anthony is offline   Reply With Quote
Post New Thread  Reply

  Alcohol Report > Alcohol Reviews > Home Brewing



Thread Tools



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 08:39 AM.

Powered by: vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO
©2006 - 2008, Alcohol Report