G'day readers,
I know there've been a few posts on this but clearly opinions differ; some say Pride of Ringwood, some Cascade, some Cluster or Fuggles. Further, are the hops boiled for bitterness, flavour or aroma (ie 30+, 15 or 2 min) or combination? Dry hopping?
In the absence of your timely wisdom I intend to lay this down this weekend:
1x Coopers Pale kit
800 g LDME
400 g Dextrose
20 g Pride of Ringwood last 15 min
Bottle-cultured CPA yeast starter
Primary at ~20C til complete
Rack with 20 g Pride of Ringwood dry hop, 2 weeks at ~20C
Bulk prime 7 g/L dextrose
Bottle (PET)
Cheers, Mick
Coopers Pale Ale - what hops?
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- Posts: 71
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- Location: Perth, WA
I made a coopers pale ale, with POR for bittering and Cacade for aroma.
I was worried because my yeast starter didn't work so I used the kit yeast.
I think the combination of ale and lagar yeast in the kit gave it something.
It is one of the best beers I've made.
If I did it again I would add some golding aswell.
I was worried because my yeast starter didn't work so I used the kit yeast.
I think the combination of ale and lagar yeast in the kit gave it something.
It is one of the best beers I've made.
If I did it again I would add some golding aswell.
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- Posts: 71
- Joined: Friday Oct 13, 2006 10:19 am
- Location: Perth, WA
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- Joined: Thursday Sep 01, 2005 11:55 am
- Location: Gold Coast
Actually the CPA can is bittered sufficiently (to style) so I wouldn't be added any for further bittering. If you are after a genuine CPA then you should use only POR which when fresh is a very nice flavour and aroma hop, in small quantities. In this case add approx 20g toward end of boil 5mins max. This will contirbute flavour, the CPA is not a very aromatic beer so no need to dry hop.
Now if you want an American Pale Ale these are generally slightly more bitter and full of flavour / aroma so use American hops (amarillo, Cascade, Simcoe, Cluster, Williamette) and use them to add a little more bitterness (20min addition 20g), flavour (5min addition 20g), end of boil or dry hop 20g. The first three hops in combination will give you a very nice aroma and flavour.
AC
Now if you want an American Pale Ale these are generally slightly more bitter and full of flavour / aroma so use American hops (amarillo, Cascade, Simcoe, Cluster, Williamette) and use them to add a little more bitterness (20min addition 20g), flavour (5min addition 20g), end of boil or dry hop 20g. The first three hops in combination will give you a very nice aroma and flavour.
AC
There's nothing wrong with having nothing to say - unless you insist on saying it. (Anonymous)
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- Posts: 71
- Joined: Friday Oct 13, 2006 10:19 am
- Location: Perth, WA
Cheers all,
I can understand the bitterness comment Aussie. My past CPA's have been less flavoursome and slightly less aromatic than the real thing, rather than less bitter per se. Yet, I don't want overly aromatic - my personal taste is that the LCPA is too aromatic.
Hmmm, I like the idea of the dry hop - never learn if you don't make mistakes.
Right, 20g POR at 5 min then split racked primary and dry hop half with 10g cascade, leave the other half as is.
Cheers again all, Micko
I can understand the bitterness comment Aussie. My past CPA's have been less flavoursome and slightly less aromatic than the real thing, rather than less bitter per se. Yet, I don't want overly aromatic - my personal taste is that the LCPA is too aromatic.
Hmmm, I like the idea of the dry hop - never learn if you don't make mistakes.
Right, 20g POR at 5 min then split racked primary and dry hop half with 10g cascade, leave the other half as is.
Cheers again all, Micko
I have a drinking problem... two hands and only one mouth.