Monday, October 21, 2013

North Carolina Malt and Hop IPA

Ecoview Farms Hops, and Riverbend Malt House grain.When I teach classes of new homebrewers (last two are tomorrow), one of the reasons I invoke to justify my claim of it's hobby supremacy, is that you can buy the same ingredients (malts, hops, and yeast) that are used by the best commercial breweries. This is unlike wine, where the highest quality grapes aren't commonly available to home winemakers.

Is that enough though? When I add fruit to a beer, rather than an aseptic puree like many craft breweries, I go to my local farmer’s market for fresh fruit. Using ingredients often not available in the quantity required by a large production brewery. Why not do the same for malts and hops?

For one thing, in many places local malts and hops aren’t options. Luckily, I’ve brewed with locally grow wheat, but malting requires greater infrastructure. A distillery in Virginia malts and smokes their own grain, which we added to a DC Homebrewers Anniversary Stout with pleasant results. I brewed a dubbel with a couple malts from Valley Malt in Massachusetts, with delicious results. I‘ve never used local hops other than homegrown, and that has always been with mediocre results.

When I was contacted a few weeks ago by Echoview Farms in North Carolina which offered to ship me a few ounces of hops, and a sack of malt from Riverbend Malt House, I was intrigued. I wasn’t ecstatic that they sent me ingredients with a set recipe, rather than a selection of base and specialty malts, but I still gave it my best shot. It seemed like an easy way to get back into homebrewing after my summer in San Diego.

The Riverbend Malt before I ran it through my mill.When I opened the sack of mixed malts, I was a bit confused about whether the grain had already been milled or not. Some of the husks appeared cracked, while others were still intact. Rather than risk poor efficiency, I (re)milled. It was a shame that all of the malt was mixed together because it made it difficult to taste and evaluate the individual grains. Which ones would I order again?

Despite being for an IPA, the recipe contained a grand total of 4 oz of hops, including none proposed for dry hopping. Compare that to my last IPA, 5 oz of dry hops alone. When I opened up the package of Chinook, they smelled great. Sadly the same couldn’t be said for the Cascade. They were shipped in a large Mylar bag, which didn’t seem to be vacuum-packed or flushed with non-reactive gas. Probably no thanks to the three delivery attempts by UPS looking for a signature at the same time each day, the Cascade smelled like overripe hot chile peppers by the time I picked them up. They also seemed to contain excessive moisture.

The iffy Cascades are on the left, the repakaged Chinook are on the right.It is always important to evaluate your ingredients. Rather than adding the suspect hops to the beer and having to choke down the result, I threw away the Cascade, and took a few ounces of 2012 harvest Chinook from the freezer to use in the boil. I repackaged the North Carolina grown Chinook for dry hopping in the keg, where they could have the largest impact on the aroma.

Despite my complaints, the beer is actually tasting pretty good as it continues to force carbonate. It has a fresh mildly grainy malt flavor, and a nice citrusy hop aroma. Full tasting notes should be up in a couple weeks.

I think brewers are accustomed to a certain level of consistency from their brewing ingredients. The question is will these small producers be able to compete both in terms of flavor, but also things like packaging, protein levels, extract yield, and consistency. For small hop farms and micro-maltsters to truly thrive they have to produce ingredients that are more than a novelty (local) product. Sure I use fresh fruit because I like to support agriculture in my area, but the results are also better than anything that comes out of a can or bottle!

North Carolina Grown IPA

Recipe Specifics
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Batch Size (Gal): 5.25
Total Grain (Lbs): 12.12
Anticipated OG: 1.059
Anticipated SRM: 10.0
Anticipated IBU: 70.8
Brewhouse Efficiency: 71 %
Wort Boil Time: 75 Minutes

Grain
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74.3% - 9.00 lbs. Pale Ale Malt (6-row)
16.5% - 2.00 lbs. Heritage Malt (6-row)
8.3% - 1.00 lbs. Appalachian Wheat Malt
1.0% - 0.12 lbs. Chocolate Malt (350 SRM)

Hops
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1.50 oz. Chinook (Whole, 13.00% AA) @ 60 min.
2.00 oz. Chinook (Whole, 13.00% AA) @ 0 min.
2.00 oz. Chinook (Whole, 13.00% AA) @ -15 min.
2.00 oz. Chinook (Whole, 13.00% AA) @ Dry Hop

Extras
-------
0.50 Whirlfloc @ 15 min.
0.50 tsp Yeast Nutrient @ 15 min.

Yeast
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Safale US-05 Chico

Water Profile
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Profile: Washington, Hoppy

Mash Schedule
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Sacch Rest - 45 min @ 155 F

Notes
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Brewed 10/2/13 by myself

Mash water, 2 gal filtered DC water, 2 gal distilled, 4 gypsum, and 2 g CaCl.

Mash pH = 5.4 at room temperature, measured with meter.

Sparge water, 2 gal filtered DC water, 2 gal distilled, 2 gypsum, and 4 g CaCl. 1/2 tsp of phosphoric acid to drop the pH to 6.0 at room temperature.

Collected 6.75 gallons of 1.048 runnings with a double batch sparge.

Added 1.5 tsp of phosphoric acid to the wort pre-boil to lower the 5.5 pH to 5.3. Huge hot break, lots of protein.

Ended up using Chinook hops from Pacific NW in the boil. Added 2 oz at flameout, waited 15 minutes, added another 2 oz, waited another 15 minutes before chilling.

Only able to drop the temperature to 75 F. Gave 45 seconds of pure oxygen. Pitched a rehydrated pack of US05. The post-boil pH was 5.2.

Left at 65 F to ferment. Good fermentation by the next day.

Left at that temperature for the duration.

10/15/13 Kegged with the NC Chinook. Tastes very good!

11/7/13 Tasting notes, worth the effort, balanced compared to my usual IPAs.

7 comments:

Unknown said...

Hi Michael, can you recommend a pH meter?

Adam Mc said...

Can you comment on pH and mouthfeel? I heard you mention it before and I see you did a pH correction on the wort. Thanks!

The Mad Fermentationist (Mike) said...

I use a Hanna Instruments HI 98107 (~$30 plus the calibration and storage solutions). Works fine, probably I'll get one with a .01 resolution when I need to replace it. I never had great luck with pH strips.

Lower pH tends to result in a crisper beer. Luckily it is easy to play with, you can slowly add acid to a finished beer, tasting as you go. pH also impacts protein coagulation, to improve the hot break.

I'm putting effort the next few months into really dialing in my process, including pH. So you'll be hearing more about it soon.

KBinderA said...

Thanks for sharing. It's always great to learn about local maltsters. I am lucky enough to live a few hours from Valley Malt and have really enjoyed the malt they make available to homebrewers through their malt of the month program. From what I understand, they leverage this program as a testing ground for new varieties, etc.
Sounds like the NC folks might have some kinks to work out on how they package their products for homebrewers. Maybe the Valley Malt model is something for them to consider.

The NC Nomad said...

If I could ask you, In the boil is there a benefit in using hole leaf hops over pellet hops? or even in the dry hopping stage?

The Mad Fermentationist (Mike) said...

All depends on your system. Whole hops tend to be easier to separate from the wort if you aren't able to whirlpool and pull from the side.

On the flavor side, pellets store better and are more consistent, but I find good leaf hops to provide a cleaner less grassy aroma in the dry hop.

Unknown said...

Visited Riverbend Malt House in the spring this year. Took the tour given by one of the owners. All their malts are 6-row as that's what grows best in North Carolina soil. They did search for varieties that approximated 2-row flavor and brewhouse performance. A few of us from our homebrew club out of Lincolnton, NC shared a bag of Pale Malt.
We too had to re-mill. The owner suggested we tighten the settings on our rollers as the grain husks of 6-row are more difficult to separate from the grain meal.
I did one batch:
12.5# Riverbend Pale Malt
1# C-80

4oz of Chinook Whole for hopstand
2 oz Chinook dry hop

The mash smelled really grainy, if that makes sense. Never really had that smell before. Finished beer came out pretty well. At about 2 months it was one of my best red ales yet. I would cut down on the C-80 next time, though, as I think the Pale Malt made by Riverbend has a lot more flavor than other pales that I usually use--more sweetness and toasty flavors, and like I said, slightly grainy.
The owner of Riverbend mentioned their partnership with the farm you got the hops in your kit from. I looked at their website and it seemed like they were relatively new to hop-growing. Seems like from your experience, they need to work on their packaging and storage.