LCPA Recipe

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drsmurto
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Post by drsmurto »

Decided i need to do something different from my recent brews so i put down this recipe on Saturday. Ordered the hops on thursday 2:30pm, sitting in my letterbox when i got home from work on friday (Ross, you bloody legend!).

Bought myself a 6 pack of the real deal since i have never had one before. Wanted to find out what all the fuss is about. Is it just me or does this stuff taste like a HB? Or maybe i have been just overhopping all this time????

Anyway, its bubbling away furiously, wet towels are keeping it at 22. Smell coming from the room is amazing, hop heaven!

Cheers for recipe Boonie
DrSmurto
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gregb
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Post by gregb »

drsmurto wrote:Bought myself a 6 pack of the real deal since i have never had one before. Wanted to find out what all the fuss is about. Is it just me or does this stuff taste like a HB? Or maybe i have been just overhopping all this time????
No, all the other commercial breweries underhop. :wink: :lol:

Cheers,
Greg
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drsmurto
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Post by drsmurto »

Had a few CPAs yesterday and they seemed so bland after the LCPA. But at $62/carton, will be very happy if this recipe is half as good!

Thanks to Ross and a trip to the Jovial Monk i now have over 500g of hops in the fridge, might try more than 3 hops in the next brew.......
timmy
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Post by timmy »

drsmurto wrote:Had a few CPAs yesterday and they seemed so bland after the LCPA. But at $62/carton, will be very happy if this recipe is half as good! .
To be fair, the CPA is a different style to the LCPA.

I'm a big fan of both, although I think the CPA is a better quaffer/session beer.
Pale_Ale
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Post by Pale_Ale »

Yep, LCPA is much more in your face but I prefer CPA on the whole!
Coopers.
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gregb
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Post by gregb »

I can find enough love in my heart for both CPA and LCPA.

Cheers,
Greg
Pale_Ale
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Post by Pale_Ale »

:lol: LOL, you're a better man than I, I've been drinking the Coopers too long, it just tastes so right!
Coopers.
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drsmurto
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Post by drsmurto »

Had a pint of CPA with lunch today and its not too bad a drop after all! :D i forced it down :D .

Think its time to start extract brewing with all my hops and a love of the hoppier style beers :D

And to sound completely hypocritical i will start by trying to make a CPA!
Pale_Ale
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Post by Pale_Ale »

Not a bad drop? Where's your SA Pride! :lol: :lol: :lol:
Coopers.
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drsmurto
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Post by drsmurto »

Still my commercial drop of choice - 8 years of the unibar converted me from my evil westend Hahn Ice drinking ways. Shudders.....

At $62 a box i wont be converting to LCPA anytime soon. Is this stuff on tap anywhere in perth? Am heading over there later in the year for work and would love to sample some more.
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Boonie
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Post by Boonie »

drsmurto wrote:Still my commercial drop of choice - 8 years of the unibar converted me from my evil westend Hahn Ice drinking ways. Shudders.....

At $62 a box i wont be converting to LCPA anytime soon. Is this stuff on tap anywhere in perth? Am heading over there later in the year for work and would love to sample some more.
http://www.littlecreatures.com.au/fetch/

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pixelboy
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Post by pixelboy »

A bit OT but I was just browsing around the LCPA site dreaming of drinking the sweet nectar instead of doing work when I came across this... thought you guys may be interested..

Interesting the reasons they use a secondary yeast, not just for carbonation..
Our Little Creatures ale yeast has the hardest job of all (not). Working its way through two batches of pale ale wort at 5000 litres per batch takes some 6 days, after which we chill and cold stabilise for a week before filtering off the yeast. The pale ale then receives a secondary conditioning yeast, some priming sugar to get it going, and it's either into the bottle and off to our temperature controlled conditioning store, or into one of our six monumental serving vessels behind the bar. Either way, the conditioning yeast performs a most wonderful service. It cleans up the beer taking away harsh green flavours allowing those complex hop, malt and fermentation aromas to make their mark. It also increases the CO2 to where we want it, and finally it keeps the beer fresh for longer by soaking up any oxidants in the beer. I guess yeast is just Mother Natures' little gift to us to ensure you get better beer.
From >> http://www.littlecreatures.com.au/paleale/log.html

Its certainly the best most refined beer ive ever tasted... :)
scblack
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Post by scblack »

I'll be doing this recipe over the weekend, looking forward to trying it.

Attempt number two for me.
"Not all chemicals are bad. Without chemicals such as hydrogen and oxygen, for example, there would be no way to make water, a vital ingredient in beer." - Dave Barry.
BenH
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Post by BenH »

slight tangent here - I am attempting to make the BrewCellar recipe for LCPA. It calls for 2 x12g of Cascade Hops. I got a couple of the teabags, my question is should I simply chuck both bags into the fermenter just before pitching, or should I boil one for a length of time and pitch the other?

I would lean towards pitching both given LCPA is highly aromatic hops-wise, anyone else got a no-pinion?

Cheers - BenH
Pale_Ale
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Post by Pale_Ale »

LCPA is quite bitter IMO, I doubt any kit would be sufficiently bittered to get close to LCPA. I would get some hop pellets and boil them up for 30-60 minutes.
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Boonie
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Post by Boonie »

BenH wrote:slight tangent here - I am attempting to make the BrewCellar recipe for LCPA. It calls for 2 x12g of Cascade Hops. I got a couple of the teabags, my question is should I simply chuck both bags into the fermenter just before pitching, or should I boil one for a length of time and pitch the other?

I would lean towards pitching both given LCPA is highly aromatic hops-wise, anyone else got a no-pinion?

Cheers - BenH
Try boiling 1 for 30 and one for 15....in my no-pinion. :lol:
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Boonie
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Post by Boonie »

Pale_Ale wrote:LCPA is quite bitter IMO, I doubt any kit would be sufficiently bittered to get close to LCPA. I would get some hop pellets and boil them up for 30-60 minutes.
I dunno about that, I think the recipe I was given has plenty of hops to give the Aroma and bitterness of LCPA.

You could cook for a little longer, if you think it was not bitter enough. IMO I think it is just right, and again, it is not my recipe, so I am not biased. I just like to share :lol:

Cheers

Boonie
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forcetwelve
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Post by forcetwelve »

legend boonie! thx for sharing the recipe. i'm going to put it down this weekend.

one query: would it be ok not to rack and just add the chinook to the primary and leave for how long?
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Boonie
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Post by Boonie »

forcetwelve wrote:legend boonie! thx for sharing the recipe. i'm going to put it down this weekend.

one query: would it be ok not to rack and just add the chinook to the primary and leave for how long?
Racking would be better to get the brew off the trub, however, if you do have a second fermenter, I would dry hop the Chinook hops after 4 Days brewing and bottle after another 7 days.

Cheers

Boonie
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forcetwelve
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Post by forcetwelve »

ok thanks boonie.

by 'dry hopping' i assume this means just dropping the pellets in the brew without prior soaking?
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