I can't tell if you have extremely large hands or very tiny glasses, the beer looks exciting though!
1060!!! Blimey, that must have been like syrup!!@royalewithcheese
Just taken a sample of the NEIPA. Its down from 1060 on Friday to 1028 today.
Smells unreal, not over hopped at the moment.
The colour is bob on for the style too.
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1060!!! Blimey, that must have been like syrup!!
I can't tell if you have extremely large hands or very tiny glasses, the beer looks exciting though!
Nice!!Standard for the style, I suppose. Lots of oats and flaked wheat in it. Should be about 6.1%
That would explain the nice frothy head it has to some degree I guessLots of oats and flaked wheat in it.
That would explain the nice frothy head it has to some degree I guess
Thank you for your valuable advice, I'll try a 50/50 Sugar/Spay Malt mix on the next batch and see how that comes out!!Sugar ferments out completely into alcohol leaving nothing else behind, dextrose is also just sugar too so it wont make any difference compared to using granulated sugar.
Spray malt is dried malt extract, which while it contains alot of sugars, it also contains some things that won't be fermented, which is what imparts some flavour and body on the beer.
Try on your next batch swapping half the sugar for spray malt. So if you're normally adding 1kg of sugar, try 500g spray malt and 500g sugar. You could even do 1kg spray malt and no sugar and see what you like the most, it's all personal preference at the end of the day

Maybe also try a different yeast as they all impart different flavour notes into the finished ale.Sugar ferments out completely into alcohol leaving nothing else behind, dextrose is also just sugar too so it wont make any difference compared to using granulated sugar.
Spray malt is dried malt extract, which while it contains alot of sugars, it also contains some things that won't be fermented, which is what imparts some flavour and body on the beer.
Try on your next batch swapping half the sugar for spray malt. So if you're normally adding 1kg of sugar, try 500g spray malt and 500g sugar. You could even do 1kg spray malt and no sugar and see what you like the most, it's all personal preference at the end of the day



When I wanted a number of the swing top bottles for my cider, the cost in UK was stupid... It was cheaper to buy them in Germany full of beer and pay the deposit than empty in UK! Oh well a weekend away drinking in Belgium and Germany and brought a load back full it was then.Hi Martin - well worth getting in to brewing. My top tip is use swing top (grolsch style) bottles, they keep the fizz better. Also follow the instructions. Whenever I’ve tried to be clever I’ve made it worse!!
That's looking really good and very tasty Morkai. I think I need to come round for a visit to pick up a few tips - And a couple of tasters once it has had time to "condition"!![]()
When I wanted a number of the swing top bottles for my cider, the cost in UK was stupid... It was cheaper to buy them in Germany full of beer and pay the deposit than empty in UK! Oh well a weekend away drinking in Belgium and Germany and brought a load back full it was then.
Out of interest why has it finished with such a high FG for a not ludicrous OG? Was it a fairly cold mash?The NEIPA took 13days to ferment and finished at 1014. Final ABV of 6.04%.
15x500ml bottles from the brew.
It's just been bottled, avoiding as much oxygen exposure as possible. I used a cream whipper to fill a balloon with CO2 to replace the airlock and purged the bottles.
The bottles were also squeezed before adding the screw top to remove air in the headspace. Something you cant do with glass.
Even in the brown bottle you can see it's a lovely bold yellow.
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Replying to myself just seen the oats and wheat.Out of interest why has it finished with such a high FG for a not ludicrous OG? Was it a fairly cold mash?