Try one of our peer reviewed recipes and ingredient kits! Each of these recipes are designed and hand crafted by the staff at KJ.
All kits include the required ingredients and instructions.
Try one of our peer reviewed recipes and ingredient kits! Each of these recipes are designed and hand crafted by the staff at KJ.
All kits include the required ingredients and instructions.
Starter kits are a great way to get started brewing. Our different kits have everything you need to get that first batch cooking.
Starter kits are a great way to get started brewing. Our different kits have everything you need to get that first batch cooking.
October 09, 2019 9 min read
One of the best parts about making beer (aside from drinking it) is the social aspect. Brewers love to swap recipes, discuss what well or horribly wrong in their brews. We thought it would be a fun idea to start a beer conversation here. We're going to make a beer every month here and encourage other brewers to make it as well. In the end, we're hoping we can share our opinions and experiences with the recipe and crowd-source some improvements. The recipes will be easy to make and we will gladly assist new home brewers in the production of these beers. They will all be 5.5 gallons in size. We find that after fermenting and racking a 5.5 gallon batch turns into a standard 5 gallon batch pretty quickly.
At the start of every month we will post the recipe in store, as well as on our website, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. We will also have a set price for the recipe that will include a discount of up to 25%!
Good things take time. That is something that became evident when trying to create this recipe. This iteration is the 3rd attempt at making a double IPA. The first two were failures, but we learned a lot of lessons from those duds, and the final result is a big beast of a hop forward beer.
The key to a double IPA is that it needs to be extremely hoppy, with juuuuust the right amount of bitterness. Too much and it tastes unbalanced even though it is an ‘IPA’. Too little and the beer comes off sweet and flat. The mistakes we made in the first two was to add hops during the boil. It was only an ounce or two, but that, combined with the post boil hops created a beer with far too much bitterness.
It was after the second failed beer that we realized that we needed to take a leap of faith and not add any hops during the boil. It seemed against all the rules, but ultimately it worked out perfectly. The key is timing. Adding hops at “whirlpool” (ie, post boil) WILL add bitterness, the temperature you add them at determines the level of bitterness that comes through. The main advantage to adding hops at the whirlpool stage is that a tremendous amount of flavour comes through. This recipe has a two stage hop addition during the cooling phase. The first round goes in between 180-185°F and sits for 10 minutes, the second round goes in at 160°F. This combination of hops gives the beer a massive hop aroma and flavour.
During the fermentation process we then dry hop to add even more hop aroma and flavour. At the end of the process we have a big, bold, delicious IPA that is surprisingly approachable to non-IPA drinkers. It has lots of hops in it, but the bitterness is smooth.
Ingredients
Grains
- Maris Otter x 12.0lbs
- Flaked Wheat x 1.5lbs
- Flaked Oats x 1.5lbs
- Carafoam x 1.0lbs
- Acidulated Malt x .4lbs
Hops (Total 11 ounces!!)
180°F Addition
Azacca x 1oz, Mosaic x 1oz, El Dorado x 1oz, Simcoe x 1oz
160°F Addition
Azacca x 1oz, Mosaic x 1oz, El Dorado x 1oz, Simcoe x 1oz
Dry Hop Addition
Mosaic x 1oz, El Dorado x 2oz
Yeast
- Cerberus Yeast (Escarpment Labs)
Extras
- Calcium Carbonate - 4g (.8 tsp) to the mash (if using standard Guelph water)
- Dry Malt Extract (0.4 cup for priming at bottling)
Instructions
Mashing -> converting the grain into a fermentable liquid.
Boiling -> Sterilizing the wort time.
Cooling & Whirlpooling -> Let’s Get Hoppy
Fermentation -> Turning the wort into beer
Bottling -> We’re getting close to Beer Time now.