Sat Feb 09, 2013 2:32 pm
I watched/listened to the Pale Ale video from Brew U, and Matt Bryndilson suggested dry hopping near the end of fermentation because yeast does something technical that I can't remember to the dry hop flavor. I normally don't care much for the taste of dry hops, but I just dry hopped a beer using his advice, and I got the best dry hop flavor I've ever had in one of my own homebrews. The aroma is there, but the grassy/resiny flavor is not. The flavor is more of an intense citrus that you might get from a huge whirlpool addition. I dry hopped it Lagunitas-style with 12g Chinook, 12g Cascade, 12g Simcoe, 12g Centennial, and 8g Ahtanum...all Hop Union pellets. Beer OG was 1.057, dry hop gravity was 1.016, and the beer is currently 1.014. Beer temperature is 68-70 degrees. It'll probably go down another point or two.
Come On Fulham!!
"...know your process, know your yeast." - Ozwald