HOPS
Moderator: slothrob
HOPS
Alright, I have to ask. What types of Hops do you like to use. It seems to me, that no matter what type of beer that I want to brew(light/dark) I normally go back to the same type of hops every time. I like the mixture of Willamette and Fruggles in many beers, and if I want something different, I use the Hallertaur and Saaz combo. Which is kind of weird since I am a German Irish american and the F/W hops are staples for Irish/English brews and the H/S are staples for German brewing. I am sure its just a coinsidence, or maybe its something grained into my genes.?
High on Crystal
Goldings and cascade are regulars in my beer. I recently tried Crystal and Cascade together and highly recommend. I would also like to try Crystal and Tettnang together, as well using Crystal as a dry hop. Hallertau & Tettnang go nice together too.
tried
I've tried some of those combinations and they have tasted fine. The only hop I have tried and not liked was Chinook. Between those hops, and a little too much on the dark malt, made my Irish stout something Arthur Guinness would wince over. Of course I drank it. Somethimes mixed it with a pale ale to porter it, but that one was too much. Haven't used it since.
Chinook fine by me...
I use Chinook as a bittering hop for my IPA and pale ales. Coupled with Cascade for flavor and Aroma you can't go wrong. Maybe you didn't get fresh Chinook hops.
High alpha
I have never tried Chinook, but I think bittering with them would be good. I don't think their high alpha content would have the finesse needed for flavouring a stout.
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- Strong Ale
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- Joined: Thu Oct 25, 2001 10:12 pm
second chinooks
I tried chinook as a fallback once when I couldn't get perle hops to bitter a west coast style PA. 1/2 ounce gave me all the bittering I was looking for and complemented the finishing cascades wonderfully. For at least the last 4 times I have brewed pale ales I have stuck with chinook I like it so much. I have to make a point of forcing myself back to perle for a batch and make an objectove comparison.
Cheers,
Jim
Cheers,
Jim