|
|
Sharkstooth IPA Extract RecipeOriginal
Gravity: 1.062
IBU: 106 (Wow! This brew has got a bite!) Please
read these instructions completely before beginning your brew. Ingredients: 6.6#
(2 cans) Amber Liquid Malt Extract (LME) 1.5#
Amber Dry Malt Extract (DME) 1#
Crushed Crystal Malt 1#
Crushed Wheat Malt 2
oz. Chinook Hop Pellets (bittering) 1
oz. Cascade Hop Pellets (flavor) 1
oz. Cascade Hop Pellets (aroma) 1
oz. Willamette Hop Pellets (aroma) 1
Whrlfloc Tablet (Irish Moss) 11.5
gm. S-04 Dry Ale Yeast (Whitbread Strain) Muslin
Grain Bag Procedure: Begin
by soaking the cans of LME in a bowl or pot of warm water to make it easier to
get out of the can later. Fill
your brewpot (preferably a 20qt. stainless stock pot) with two gallons of cold
water. Place
the crushed grains in the muslin grain bag and secure with a knot at the top.
Place the bag into the brewpot and begin heating the water.
When the water reaches a temperature of 170F remove the bag and discard.
Continue heating the water until it reaches a boil.
When the water is boiling, remove the pot from the heat and slowly add
the LME and the DME stirring constantly to avoid scorching.
When thoroughly mixed return the brewpot to the heat and return to a
boil. BEWARE OF THE BOILOVER!
When the mixture first boils it may produce a heavy foam.
Watch for the foam to rise, and when it does, turn off the flame until
the foam subsides (if using an electric stove, it may be necessary to lift the
brewpot off of the burner). After
the foam has risen once, it will generally lessen, and it’s safe to return to
a steady boil without foaming over. However,
sometimes foaming may occur again. If
so, simply repeat this procedure until foaming finally stops. After you have achieved a steady boil, add the bittering hops
and continue boiling. After boiling
for 30 minutes add the flavor hops. After
boiling for 45 minutes add the Whirfloc Tablet. After boiling for 60 minutes remove the brewpot from the
heat, add the aroma hops, and cover. While
the wort is cooling, fill your sanitized fermenter with 3 gallons of cold water.
Then proof your yeast by filling a sanitized measuring cup with about a
cup of warm (about 80F) water, sprinkle the yeast into the water, mix with a
sanitized spoon, and cover with a piece of foil.
In about fifteen minutes you should see some foaming and smell a
“bready” aroma. If you don’t, try it again with your spare packet of yeast
(all good brewers keep spare yeast at the ready in the fridge), but 99% of the
time it works just fine. When
the wort has cooled to under 100F, add it to the cold water in the fermenter
(splashing is ok and even recommended to aerate the wort at this stage).
Try to leave as much of the sediment on the bottom of the brewpot as you
can. Take the temperature of the
wort in your fermenter. It should
be below 75F. Remove a sample to
measure the Original Gravity with your hydrometer (do not return the sample to
the fermenter when finished). Then
add the yeast and seal your fermenter with an airlock (bucket) or blow-off hose
(carboy) and place in a spot where the temperature stays between 65F and 70F.
Within the next 24 hours fermentation should start. You
are now on the way to producing a delicious batch of homebrew – Cheers! |
|