White Man's Burden IPA
"Take up the White Man's burden--
Send forth the best ye breed--
Go bind your sons to exile
To serve your captives' need;
To wait in heavy harness,
On fluttered folk and wild--
Your new-caught, sullen peoples,
Half-devil and half-child."
Rudyard Kipling was kind of an asshole, wasn't he? Eff that guy and his racist bullshit.
I do think "White Man's Burden" is a great name for an IPA though, in an ironic hipster sort of way.
This is a full-bodied, strong and highly-hopped IPA in the classic tradition. It uses common UK ingredients, along with a few American substitutes.
A pound of American 2-row helps with conversion of the highly-kilned UK pale malt, and a little wheat malt enhances head retention.
Centennial hops add American hop character, without the overly floral Cascades signature.
Brewer: | John Albert | Email: | - | |||||
Beer: | White Man's Burden IPA | Style: | India Pale Ale | |||||
Type: | All grain | Size: | 5 gallons | |||||
Color: |
|
Bitterness: | 65 IBU | |||||
OG: | 1.066 | FG: | 1.014 | |||||
Alcohol: | 6.7% v/v (5.2% w/w) | |||||||
Water: | I charcoal-filter all my water, then boil it to drive off any chlorine and temporary hardness. Then for this beer, I treat it with 1/2 teaspoon of Burton salts. |
|||||||
Grain: | 9 lb. British pale 1 lb. American 2-row 4 oz. Belgian aromatic 1 lb. American crystal 20L 3 oz. British crystal 135-165L 4 oz. Wheat malt |
|||||||
Mash: | 75% efficiency | |||||||
This is a 2-step infusion mash. Add 12 quarts 135°F water. Stir, stabilize and hold at 128°F for 30 minutes. Add 5 quarts boiling water, then stir the mash while continuing to add more boiling water until temperature reaches 150°F. Hold for 75 minutes. Lauter and sparge with 170°F water to collect 6 gallons of wort. |
||||||||
Boil: | 75 minutes | SG 1.055 | 6 gallons | |||||
At the start of the boil, add bittering hops: 1 oz. Northern Brewer (8.5 AAU/HBU) and 1 oz. US Kent Goldings (4.5 AAU/HBU) Boil for 55 minutes, then add flavor hops: 1 oz. US Kent Goldings (4.5 AAU/HBU) and 2/3 oz. Centennial (8.5 AAU/HBU) Boil 5 more minutes, then add 1/2 teaspoon Irish moss Boil 15 more minutes, then add aroma hops: 1 oz. US Kent Goldings and 1/3 oz Centennial. Remove from heat, chill rapidly and add to fermenter. |
||||||||
Hops: | 1 oz. US Kent Goldings (4.5% AA, 75 min.) 1 oz. Northern Brewer (8.5% AA, 75 min.) .67 oz. Centennial (8.5% AA, 20 min.) 1 oz. US Kent Goldings (4.5% AA, 20 min.) .3 oz. Centennial (aroma) 1 oz. US Kent Goldings (aroma) |
|||||||
Yeast: | Wyeast #1187 Ringwood Ale I popped the smack pack, waited 4 hours till it swelled up, then pitched it into a 3-quart starter made from Briess Light DME, to an O.G. of 1.066. On brew day, I "top-cropped" 1 quart of krausen from the starter and pitched that at at 72° F. |
|||||||
Log: | Fermented in a 60-70° environment for 10 days, then racked into secondary. Dry-hopped with ½ oz US Kent Goldings and added ½ cup of steamed oak chips. Aged in secondary for 14 days, then kegged. | |||||||
Carbonation: | 2.0 volumes | Keg: 9.0 psi @ 45°F | ||||||
I force-carbonated for a week under 10 psi @ 45° F. If you choose to prime for bottling or kegging, you may want to add some fresh yeast along with the priming sugar/extract. |
Recipe posted 04/02/09.