I have 9 oz of simcoe, so I want to do atleast one single hop beer with them for my hophead wife.
I mash outside but I am boiling inside, so my batch size is limited.
for 3 gallons:
4.5lbs of 2row
1lb of Munich
Mashed at ~150F for 45-60 minutes in 2.5 gallons of water.
Sparge with 2 gallons of water at ~168F
So you don’t have as many IBUs as you want? If you want 70-80 then I would just make an IPA.
I think the recipe looks good and hoppy for a pale ale.
EDIT: I see what you are going after from another post; the ‘style’ that not be named so an IPA is probably out of the question. 70-80 IBUs is too much in my opinion for an APA. Just keep a lot of your hops at the end of boil so you can pack in all the hop goodness without too much bitterness.
Not sure what your original gravity is going to be, but I agree that 60 IBU is way too much. With a bunch of late hops in my setup I still get quite a bit of bitterness and I have taken to using the 15 minute hop addition as my “bittering addition” for my I.S.A.
Again, depending on the strength of the beer, you can probably do away with the FWH and move those hops to later in the boil. The O.G. on my “hopped up pale ale with moderate abv” is 1.040.
This is a style I love - Agreed that with a lower pale ale gravity it’s easy to overdue the bitterness, I certainly have before. Lately I get all my IBUs (around 30 for a 1.040ish beer) at 60m with and do a long hopstand at 170f with ~0.5oz/gallon then dry hop with 1oz (or more)/gallon and have been a lot happier.
With yeast it depends what you’re going for. My inspiration for the style is the hoppy pale ales from Tired Hands and Vermont so I like using english ale strains (London Ale III from Boddingtons is the rumored strain HFS + Tired Hands use but never confirmed) and Conan. S-05 does the trick though.
Munich should be a nice touch, I also love 15% flaked oats or wheat in this style.