Juicy NEIPA (New England IPA) Recipe

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juicy NEIPA Homebrew Recipe

One of the most popular styles of beer that people have been brewing recently is the New England IPA. They're dank, fruity, juicy, hazy, and delicious. Just thinking about them makes us thirsty! We've done a few session versions of the NEIPA, but we decided to take things to another level with this recipe by adding a ton of hops to this beer. Using Clawhammer’s 10.5 gallon Electric Brewing System, we packed this beer full ofsome of the most popular citrus and fruity hops, yielding a juicy, high ABV final product. Read on or watch the video to learn all about our Juicy NEIPA.

Juicy NEIPA Homebrew Recipe Video

Here’s how we made the Juicy NEIPA, read below for full recipe details.

NEIPA Style Guidelines

  • 2018 is the first year The Brewers Association has included a “Juicy or Hazy IPA” in its Beer Style Guidelines
  • Malts with high protein
  • Color & Clarity - Straw to golden colored with a low to high degree of cloudiness
  • Use of fruit-forward hops with a high hop aroma
  • Original Gravity - 1.070 - 1.100
  • High ABV - 6.0% - 8.4%
  • High IBUs - 65 - 100 - with a low perceived bitterness - These IBUs come from late hop additions which provide more aroma than bitterness

Water

The beginning water volume was 7.70 gallons (29.1 liters) and our chemistry was adjusted to have high chloride levels to give us a hazy NEIPA look. Below is our water profile after adjustment. You'll need to add different amounts of minerals to achieve this profile depending on your location, as water chemistry differs from tap to tap. Look up your local water chemistry and use a brewing water chemistry calculator to figure out what you need to add.

  • Calcium: 116.4 ppm
  • Magnesium: 4.0 ppm
  • Sodium: 14.0 ppm
  • Sulfates: 78.6 ppm
  • Chloride: 154.9 ppm
  • Bicarbonates: 25 ppm

Malts

  • Pilsner (2 Row) Ger (2.0 SRM) - 9 lbs (4.1kg) (70.4%)
  • Barley, Flaked (1.7 SRM) - 1 lb 8 oz (680.4g) (11.1%)
  • Oats, Flaked (1.0 SRM) - 1 lb 8 oz  (680.4g) (11.1%) - High protein, perfect for a NEIPA
  • Wheat, Flaked (1.6 SRM) - 1 lb (.5kg) (7.4%) - High protein, perfect for a NEIPA

pouring malt into grinder

We finely crush all of our malt in a grinder before mashing with it

Mashing

We mashed at 150 degrees Fahrenheit (65.6C) for 60 minutes.

mashing in

Mashing in

Boil

We boiled for 75 minutes. At the 60 minute mark, we added in .5 lb (226.8g) of sugar.

sugar

.5 lb (226.8g) of sugar we threw into the boil

Hops

The most important part to brewing a good NEIPA is the hops. We added all of our hops after the boil. Our first addition happened once we cooled the wort down to 180 degrees Fahrenheit (82.2C).

recirculating using a plate chiller

We use a plate chiller to chill our wort

At 180° F (82.2C) we added 1 oz (28.35g) of

  • Willamette
  • Mosaic
  • El Dorado
  • Citra
  • Centennial

all hops used

All the hop varieties that were used for this beer

one of the many hop additions for this beer

One of the many hop additions this recipe calls for, we add all of our hops to a hop basket

Fermentation

We used the Imperial Yeast Ale Juice A38 to ferment this beer. This yeast is perfect for IPAs and compliments the juicy and fruity flavor of our beer.

pitching yeast

Pitching yeast

Dry Hops

We waited four days until we added our first dry hop addition, ideally you want to wait three days. Fermentation was still active when we did our first addition, that’s a key part to dry hopping a NEIPA. You want to add your first round of dry hops while fermentation is still active.

wort at high krausen - if it looks like this it's still fermenting

If your beer looks like this, fermentation is still active

First Dry Hop Addition

  • 2 oz (56.7g) of Citra
  • 1 oz (28.35g) of Centennial
  • 1 oz (28.35g) of El Dorado
  • 1 oz (28.35g) of Mosaic
  • .25 oz (7.1g) of Willamette

Second Dry Hop Addition (Three Days Later)

  • 2 oz. (56.7g) of Lemondrop

adding hops to mesh bag

We add all of our dry hops to a mesh bag so they can easily be removed

Benchmarks

  • Volume Into The Fermenter - 5.50 gallons (20.8 liters)
  • Original Gravity - 1.060
  • Final Gravity - 1.014
  • ABV - 6%
  • IBUs - 55.3

Tasting Notes

This one definitely met our expectations, at least at first. After it was kegged and carbed up the Juicy NEIPA had a hazy, golden look to it with a really pleasant and fruity aroma. With an ABV of 6%, you couldn’t taste any of the alcohol. The beer had a nice body with a well balanced, smooth, and fruit juicy flavor. The Lemondrop hops we added during our last dry hop addition came through and added a little extra bitterness.

emmet drinking beer

"Super smooth, super juicy..."

However, a couple of weeks later, the fresh "juicy" flavor had faded and the beer was decidedly bitter and tasted a bit unbalanced. One thing we'd probably change for the next round is the Lemondrop hops. We think the beer would be better off with a Citra or Mosaic during our second dry hop addition.

Portrait of Kyle Brown

Kyle Brown is the owner of Clawhammer Supply, a small scale distillation and brewing equipment company which he founded in 2009. His passion is teaching people about the many uses of distillation equipment as well as how to make beer at home. When he isn't brewing beer or writing about it, you can find him at his local gym or on the running trail.

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48 Comments

  • P
    Comment Author: Pat

    I see a lot of questions that I would like to know about also but no answers? Are people getting answers by emails?
    I’ve put this recipe in Beersmith and I’m not getting the IBU level anywhere near the 55 you say it is? How do you get them to 55 with doing all the hopping after the boil?

    Thanks
    Pat.

  • P
    Comment Author: PHilippe

    Hi, a few questions here

    what kind of sugar did you use for the .5 lbs?

    At 180 after the first hop addition , how much time would i wait before transferring to primary fermenter?

    How much priming sugar would i use for a 5.5 gal batch before bottling?

    Thanks!

  • PR
    Comment Author: Pierre Rivière

    Hi, i want to ask a question. Do we continue cooling after adding the first hops at 180 fahrenheit? Or are we waiting for a while?

  • PR
    Comment Author: Pierre Rivière

    Hi, i want to ask a question. Do we continue cooling after adding the first hops at 180 fahrenheit? Or are we waiting for a while?

  • J
    Comment Author: jeakillie

    “However, a couple of weeks later, the fresh “juicy” flavor had faded and the beer was decidedly bitter and tasted a bit unbalanced."

    Hi,
    Could this “Fad off” be caused by oxidation due to possible presence of oxygen throug late fase of fermentation (introduced by Second dry hopping), kegging or bottling.
    i THINK OXYGEN IS A DEVIL IN HIGH HOPPED BEER AND REDUCE STORAGETIME.
    i WILL USE A PRESURE FERMENTOR SYSTEM AND COUNTER PRESSURE BOTLE FILLING TO AVOID INTRODUCTION OF OXYGEN.

    cAN ANYONE WITH EXPERIONS ON THAT MAKE A COMMENT ABOUT THE FALL OUT?

    bEST REGARDS jEAKILLIE