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re: Homebrewing: In-Process Thread

Posted on 1/22/15 at 10:41 am to
Posted by Fratastic423
Baton Rouge
Member since Feb 2007
5990 posts
Posted on 1/22/15 at 10:41 am to
quote:

Depends on what you want to make



an IPA


Sorry, didn't mean to sound condescending. I am a stickler of sorts for not calling a beer a specific beer style when it doesn't fit the traditional description of said beer style. If I were brewing an IPA to make a great version of an IPA to style, lots of rye, wheat or oats is not what I would add. However, brewing a beer with 16% of those grains and using an IPA hop schedule should come out great. I would think that the wheat may get lost in the shuffle with the rye and hops though.
Posted by LoneStarTiger
Lone Star State
Member since Aug 2004
15962 posts
Posted on 1/22/15 at 11:13 am to
quote:

Sorry, didn't mean to sound condescending. I am a stickler of sorts for not calling a beer a specific beer style when it doesn't fit the traditional description of said beer style. If I were brewing an IPA to make a great version of an IPA to style, lots of rye, wheat or oats is not what I would add. However, brewing a beer with 16% of those grains and using an IPA hop schedule should come out great. I would think that the wheat may get lost in the shuffle with the rye and hops though.


I'm the opposite. I don't care about style.

I wouldn't even ask if I was only using 20% or so of rye+wheat+oats, but since it would be 50% using that combination I just wondered if there is any issues that may come up, other than the potential for sparge complications, as Bug pointed out.

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