Black IPA

Black IPA Recipe

I’m a late convert to this style, long of the view that it was a fad that would pass. Well, the style remains, and I concede that a black IPA is a thing of beauty. It’s a style that elegantly contrasts roasted caramel notes with the grassy or tropical flavours. Why not, right?

Recipe Profile

  • Method: 1 gallon BIAB (Brew-in-a-bag), single stage
  • Target OG (Original Gravity): 1.065
  • Target FG (Final Gravity): 1.017
  • Bitterness (IBUs): 59
  • Estimated ABV: 6.3%
  • Boil: 60 minutes

Ingredients

  • 2.25 lbs Pale Malt (2-Row)
  • 4 oz Munich Malt (10L)
  • 2.5 oz Carafa III
  • 2.5 oz Caramunich Malt
  • 0.25 oz Columbus hops at 55 minutes
  • 0.25 oz Columbus hops at the end of the boil
  • 0.5 oz Centennial hops at the end of the boil
  • Safale American Yeast (Fermentis #05)
  • 0.40 oz Chinook, dry hop for 5 days
  • 0.50 oz Centennial, dry hop for 5 days

The Mash

  1. Bring 9 litres of water to a temperature of 163°F. Add your grains and give everything a good stir until the whole thing looks a bit like oatmeal. Shut off the heat, cover with a lid, and let it steep at 156°F for 60 minutes.
  2. Then you need to “mash out.” You put the heat back on, and raise the temperature to 168°F (75.6°C) and keep stirring for 7 minutes.
  3. Remove the grains and prepare for the boil. If you’re using a bag, just pull it out and let it drip near-dry above the pot. If you’re using a colander, strain to remove the grains, preserving the wort, which you’ll add back to the pot.
  4. Check that your gravity is on track and correct it, if needed. You need 85 gravity points for this recipe, and our target post-boil volume is 1.3 gallons.

The Boil

  1. Start the boil by bringing your wort up to a boil. Once boiling, start your timer. Add your bittering hops, as prescribed above.
  2. Meanwhile, prepare your sanitizer solution.
  3. Just before the boil is complete, make an ice batch in your kitchen sink. Load it up with as much ice and cold water as you can. Once the boil is over, transfer your pot to the sink to cool your wort to pitching temperature, as prescribed on the yeast pack. Remember to sanitize your thermometer every time you check the temperature.
  4. Meanwhile, thoroughly clean and sanitize your carboy, screw cap, airlock, funnel, and strainer/colander. You want everything to be ready to go once the wort is at the right temperature.
  5. Once the wort is at pitching temperature, transfer it to the carboy by passing it through a strainer overtop the funnel. Do not fill the carboy higher than the one-gallon mark.
  6. Aerate the wort.  Cover the fermenter with a screw cap and gently rock the carboy back and forth for a few minutes to mix in some air.
  7. Pitch the yeast! Use sanitized scissors to cut open the package and pour in only half of the yeast.
  8. Seal the carboy by filling the airlock with sanitizer. Fit it in the screw cap. Move the carboy to a dark spot, free of the home’s daily commotion for at least 14 days (but ideally not more than 21).
  9. Follow the dry hop scheduled prescribed.

Bottling Day

  1. Move the carboy to the countertop, if it wasn’t already there. If the wort got lots of movement during transfer, let it sit so that any stirred-up yeast has a chance to re-settle.
  2. Sanitize everything that will come in contact with the beer: bottling bucket, auto-siphon, tubing, filler, bottles, and bottle caps.
  3. Dissolve 0.59 oz (17g) corn sugar in enough boiling water to dissolve it. Add the dissolved sugar solution to your sanitized bottling bucket.
  4. Fill your auto-siphon and hose with sanitizer before submerging in the carboy. Transfer the solution to a spare container until the beer has completely replaced all the sanitizer in the tubes. Now you can place the end with the bottle filler in the bottling bucket, which should also be on the floor and gently transfer the beer from the carboy to the bucket.
  5. Transfer all the liquid up and the point where it reaches the sediment. Leave the sediment in the carboy.
  6. Now, move the bottling bucket to the counter and siphon the beer quietly into each bottle. When the liquid gets to the very top of the bottle, remove the bottle filler, which will leave the perfect amount of headspace at the top of the bottle.
  7. Cover each bottle with the sanitized caps and cap them into place, or secure your sanitized swing-top caps if using those.
  8. Store the bottles upright in a quiet, dark corner at 65F (18.5C) or so.
  9. Wait 30 days, if you can. If you’re way too curious (I can’t blame you!) try and hold out for 14 days. If you absolutely can’t wait, you can try after 7 days, but the beer really needs at least 14 days to condition.

Comments

9 responses to “Black IPA”

  1. I’ve just bottled this recipe and it’s astounding. FIRST ever all grain brew and I’m hooked. I’ll be making 3 batches next week so I get 50 bottles rather than 15. Thanks For all the great information on the website. Looking forward to trying out more!

  2. Nick

    Does “0.25 oz Columbus hops at 55 minutes” mean after 55 minutes or with 55 minutes left? Thanks! I hope it means with the 5 minutes remaining Otherwise I messed up

    1. Lauri

      Looks.like no one ever answered you but it would have been with 55 min Left in the boil. I’m. Sure by now yiu have.more experience and know this. 😉

    2. Mat Henry

      I am curious about this as well..

  3. Shawn Cameron

    I’ve made this a few times. It is great, one of the best brew’s you can make at home.

  4. Chris

    This Will be my first brew to dry hop. On this recipe, do i dry hop one for five days and then the other? Or do i dry hop both For the last 5 days? Thank you in advance.

  5. peter

    Gallon us or imperial?

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