ASK WHEEBZ -
So, I'm realizing just how fleeting the freshly-dry-hopped IPA flavors are ...
I'm seeing why Jamil always says he makes big batches of the big malty beers, his RIS, his B/W etc, and smaller batches of the hoppy beers ...
My Eis-Imperial has half the perceived Citra only like 2-3 weeks later ... while still good, it's more Columbus-y and less Citra-y in a matter of only weeks ...
I can imagine, now, making 12 gallons of a base recipe for a big stout outside in the big kettle, and splitting down into three 4 gallon batches to ferment in 5 gallon corny's with a drop of fermcap, and running different yeast and/or oaking etc ...
Yet, not doing that for IPA's ... doing those in the 24 qt system, and more frequently ...
It causes me to ask, what happens if you wait two weeks to dry-hop? ... do you postpone the window? ... if I split a batch of IPA, and stagger the dry-hopping + carbonation, can I have a overlap in peak hoppiness for the splits? ...
And, I also had one quick question about gypsum and water chemistry ...
There's some sentiment out there - however myopic this model might be - that some additional gypsum is good for uber-hoppy IPA's ...
Is this for a higher peak of perceived hoppiness, or greater longevity of hoppy flavor? ...
Thanks, man =)