Maine Beer Company

Discussion in 'Homebrewing' started by groverbeer123, Jun 19, 2015.

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  1. groverbeer123

    groverbeer123 Initiate (0) Jul 27, 2013 New Jersey

    any one have a Dinner clone?
     
  2. GetMeAnIPA

    GetMeAnIPA Pooh-Bah (2,559) Mar 28, 2009 California
    Pooh-Bah

    Only 2 ozs in dry hop?
     
    telejunkie likes this.
  3. telejunkie

    telejunkie Savant (1,107) Sep 14, 2007 Vermont

    Vitals:
    Color: Yellow-Orange
    OG: 1.069
    ABV: 8.2%
    Malt: 2-Row, CaraPils, Caramel 40 & Dextrose
    Hops: Citra, Falconer’s Flight, Mosaic & Simcoe.
    Our first Double IPA – dry, refreshing and hoppy. We really focused on hop flavor and aroma here. To maximize hop character, we dry hopped Dinner twice with over 6 lbs. of hops per barrel
    Source

    So at 6 lbs/barrel, that implies 6lbs in 31 gallon...divide by 6 gets you about 1lb of dry hops in a 5 gallon batch of beer...:grimacing::astonished:
    Also with an og around 1069 that means it finishes ~1.009, so keeping cara malts down to a pound or less.
     
    #4 telejunkie, Jun 19, 2015
    Last edited: Jun 19, 2015
  4. jlordi12

    jlordi12 Pooh-Bah (1,856) Jun 8, 2011 Massachusetts
    Pooh-Bah

    Nothing says refreshing like a 8% IIPA
     
    bushycook, VikeMan and telejunkie like this.
  5. TheHumanTorch

    TheHumanTorch Devotee (353) Jul 19, 2013 Connecticut

    Dry hopping doesn't scale 1:1. Larger systems require proportionally more dry hopping to achieve the same flavor/aroma. Also a beer with that amount of dry hopping will oxidize very quickly if it isn't packaged properly. I've experienced and seen many pictures on this site of beers that oxidized in the bottle or keg, particularly dry hopped beer. One characteristic is a beer that darkens after packaging.
     
    JackHorzempa likes this.
  6. Tackleberry

    Tackleberry Initiate (155) Jun 11, 2015 New York

  7. Brew_Betty

    Brew_Betty Initiate (0) Jan 5, 2015 Wisconsin

    A 1# dry hop per 5 gallons almost justifies their $12 per pint price. Not really.

    Now that I know they claim 1# per 5gal dry hop, I will actually purchase this silly beer for $12 a pint. Most likely not more than once.
     
  8. Hayden34

    Hayden34 Initiate (0) Aug 10, 2014 Georgia

    I know this thread is a little old, but did anyone actually brew one of the clones posted? If so, how did it turn out?
     
  9. JackHorzempa

    JackHorzempa Grand Pooh-Bah (3,375) Dec 15, 2005 Pennsylvania
    Society Pooh-Bah

    Yeah verily!!

    A tall 100 barrel Cylindroconical tank is markedly different from a 5 gallon homebrew batch in a bucket.

    Cheers!

    P.S. As was published in Dave Green's article entitled Advanced Dry Hopping: "Peter Wolfe also weighed in on the topic saying especially if a homebrewer is using a flat bottomed fermenter, there is little reason to layer in your hops, the surface area to volume ratio is much greater on a homebrew scale."
     
  10. VikeMan

    VikeMan Grand Pooh-Bah (3,067) Jul 12, 2009 Pennsylvania
    Pooh-Bah

    What do you mean by surface area? Surface area of what?

    ETA: Nevermind, I found the article. Referring to the top of the hops sitting in the cone apparently.
     
    #11 VikeMan, Jan 4, 2016
    Last edited: Jan 4, 2016
  11. JackHorzempa

    JackHorzempa Grand Pooh-Bah (3,375) Dec 15, 2005 Pennsylvania
    Society Pooh-Bah

    Maybe @Peter_Wolfe will join in this thread discussion.

    Cheers!
     
  12. telejunkie

    telejunkie Savant (1,107) Sep 14, 2007 Vermont

    exactly as you guy came up with regarding the commercial dry hopping methods vs. hb level.

    I brewed up the version from the Sept issue of BYO, but with gigayeast's Conan strain and 6 oz dry hops.
    1) Don't use Conan, use chico strain…although I've never had conan work all that well for me in regards to attenuation levels.
    2) Had a hard time ultimately gauging vs. the real deal, but felt like that level of dry hops provided plenty of nose. Unfortunately the conan strain had under-attenuated (finished at 1016 or so) and so perception was thrown off when evaluating.

    Felt if i just used us-05 or some other more neutral & well-attenuating yeast, I would have been much happier with the clone attempt. You could also probably nix the cara40…
     
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  13. mbbransc

    mbbransc Initiate (0) Mar 24, 2009 North Carolina

    @telejunkie was it 1st gen of Conan? Subsequent batches attenuate better. Just a thought going forward.
     
  14. Jesse14

    Jesse14 Initiate (0) Jul 21, 2011 Massachusetts

    I've used Yeast Bay's Conan and Omega's version and never had less than 80% attenuation with mashing at 152. I have heard complaints about the Giga strain
     
  15. Budtall

    Budtall Initiate (0) Dec 24, 2015 California

    Every single time I have used Conan (about 5 times, from just about every producer) it has underattenuated.
     
  16. telejunkie

    telejunkie Savant (1,107) Sep 14, 2007 Vermont

    Huh, cause basically I'll just split off like 4-6 oz of my yeast starter for subsequent batches…so most of my yeast these days are 1st gen. On that particular batch I also possibly under-oxygenated since my 02 tank ran out of juice somewhere maybe in the first quarter of the batch while chilling and I didn't have a spare tank. But that doesn't explain the other two times using it.
     
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