Samples

Register to Receive Samples of Tim Sciascia’s DDH Hazy IPA Experiments

Register to Receive Samples of Tim Sciascia’s DDH Hazy IPA Experiments

Now available for you to taste: three unique Hazy IPAs from Berkeley Yeast’s Brand Ambassador Tim Sciascia! Use the form below to request free samples of Tim’s soft and juicy DDH Hazy IPA featuring Riwaka, Nelson and Citra hops and fermented three different ways:

  • Fresh London strain
  • Tropics London strain
  • Tropics London strain with Tropics Boost added for an extra tropical punch

These iterations – all derived from one wort stream and double dry hopped exactly the same – will give you a true-to-brewery experience of what you can expect with our hazy yeast strains. 

The samples are free. You must be 21 years of age or older and work for a commercial brewery in the United States. One set of samples per brewery. Supplies are limited so breweries will be picked by random on March 31st . 



RECIPE

  • OG After Sugar: 16.5P
  • FG: 3.0
  • Target ABV: 7.3%

Grist

  • 75% Pilsner Malt
  • 10% Flaked Oats
  • 15% Dextrin Malt

Sugar

  • 1 Plato worth of Dextrose
  • 1 Plato worth of Brewers Crystals

Water Chemistry

  • 50g/bbl Calcium Chloride
  • 20g/bbl Sodium Chloride

Mash

  • Mash 150°F
  • Target mash pH: 5.45

Hops

  • Target IBU: 20
  • Riwaka T90 - 1.5 lbs/bbl @ whirlpool @ 160°F
  • Citra T90- 2 lb/bbl Dry Hop
  • Nelson T90 -  2 lbs/bbl Dry Hop

Yeast (Fermented Three Ways all at 68°F)

  1. Fresh London
  2. Tropics London
  3. Tropics London with 100mL/bbl Tropics Boost

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Register to Receive Samples of Tim Sciascia’s DDH Hazy IPA Experiments

Register to Receive Samples of Tim Sciascia’s DDH Hazy IPA Experiments

Request free samples of Tim’s soft and juicy DDH Hazy IPA featuring Riwaka, Nelson and Citra hops and fermented three different ways.

Non-Alcoholic Beer Recipe Design with Tim Sciascia of Berkeley Yeast

Non-Alcoholic Beer Recipe Design with Tim Sciascia of Berkeley Yeast

Thinking about brewing a non-alcoholic beer? Non-alc brewing differs from crafting a full strength beer so be sure to watch this step by step analysis of the considerations you should take when writing your first recipe.

Tim Sciascia’s Tropics Boosted Hazy IPA

Tim Sciascia’s Tropics Boosted Hazy IPA

Looking to lower costs on your Hazy IPA but not at the expense of aromatic potency? This recipe relies on a heavy dose of Berkeley Yeast’s Tropics Boost and fermentation with Tropics London yeast strain for an attention grabbing bouquet of passionfruit.

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Turning Off Unwanted Flavors: How Berkeley Yeast’s Fresh Strains Create Low Diacetyl IPAs and Lagers

Turning Off Unwanted Flavors: How Berkeley Yeast’s Fresh Strains Create Low Diacetyl IPAs and Lagers

Like most brewers, Danny Priddy has a pretty discerning palate. The director of brewing operations at Riip Beer Company in Huntington Beach, California, is particularly sensitive to diacetyl, an organic compound that, at low concentrations, can mute hop notes in beers like Riip’s aroma-charged IPAs. At high concentrations, diacetyl can add an unwanted buttery note. 

How Tropics Strains Are Helping Brewers Create More Aromatic IPAs

How Tropics Strains Are Helping Brewers Create More Aromatic IPAs

J.C. Hill, the cofounder of Alvarado Street Brewery in Monterey, California, wanted to make a hazy IPA that’s welcoming in both flavor and price point; increasing the hopping rate increases a beer’s price tag, and a $24 four-pack is a hard sell to many drinkers. So he built a recipe around Tropics London and three hop varieties that impart flavors evocative of kid-favorite candies including Lifesavers, gummy bears, and peach rings. “They line up super-well with the passion fruit and guava flavors you get from the yeast,” says Hill, who calls Tropics “a game changer.”

How Berkeley Yeast’s Superbloom Builds Highly Drinkable Hoppy Beer

How Berkeley Yeast’s Superbloom Builds Highly Drinkable Hoppy Beer

Over the last decade, boom-and-bust cycles have defined the IPA category. Sour IPAs, overly bitter palate wreckers, and bone-dry brut IPAs have mostly disappeared, a dry-hopped gold rush that didn’t quite pan out. Session IPAs also fizzled out, even though the concept seemed like a certain winner. Drop an IPA’s alcohol by volume to a more restrained 4 or 5 percent, keep flavor and aromatics high, and count the profits. Outside of Founders All Day IPA, many session IPAs were too dry and thin to support hop bitterness.