GärungTools.net is reader-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission at no extra cost to you.
The New England IPA has reshaped how brewers and drinkers think about hoppy beer. Where West Coast IPAs prize clarity and sharp Bittere, the NEIPA delivers a pillowy, juice-forward experience with a permanent haze that is not a flaw but a deliberate feature of grain selection, Wasserchemie, hopping technique, and yeast choice working in concert.
Dieser Leitfaden führt durch every variable that separates a mediocre hazy from a truly outstanding one, with tested ratios, timing windows, and the science behind the turbidity.
Zusammenfassung
A great NEIPA starts with a Schüttung of 50-60% pale Basismalz plus 15-20% flaked oats and 10-15% flaked wheat, mashed at 154-156 degF. Target water with a chloride-to-sulfate ratio of at least 2:1 (150-200 ppm Cl, 50-75 ppm SO4). Use Wyeast 1318 London Ale III or equivalent for its low Flockung and fruity ester contribution. Limit bittering additions and instead load 80%+ of your hops at whirlpool (170-180 degF) and Dry Hop during active Gärung (biotransformation) at 1-3 days post-pitch. Expect 6.5-7.5% ABV, 40-60 calculated IBU (perceived much lower), and a finishing gravity around 1.014-1.018.
Methodik
This recipe framework is built on BJCP 2021 style guideline 21C (Hazy IPA), cross-referenced with published recipes from The Alchemist (Heady Topper), Tree House Brewing (Julius), and Trillium. Water chemistry targets follow the research published by Martin Brungard in Bru’n Water and John Palmer’s Water: A Comprehensive Guide for Brewers (Brewers Publications, 2013). Dry hopping timing data is drawn from Scott Janish’s The New IPA (2018) and his analysis of biotransformation studies. Yeast performance data comes from White Labs and Wyeast technical sheets. All efficiency calculations assume a standard 72% Sudhausausbeute on a 5-gallon (19 L) batch system.
The Schüttung: Building Body and Haze
The Schüttung is the structural backbone of the NEIPA, and it differs significantly from a West Coast IPA. You need protein-rich adjuncts to generate stable haze, a higher Maischetemperatur for residual sweetness, and enough Basismalz diastatic power to convert everything.
Basismalz (50-60%)
Use a domestic 2-row or premium Pale Ale malt (Rahr, Briess, or Maris Otter for slightly more biscuit character). The Basismalz provides the enzymatic power to convert the large proportion of unmalted adjuncts.
Flaked Oats (15-20%)
Oats contribute beta-glucans and proteins that enhance body, Mundgefühl, and haze stability. They add a silky, almost creamy texture that is central to the style. Go with flaked (pre-gelatinized) oats to avoid a stuck mash.
Flaked Wheat (10-15%)
Wheat proteins interact with polyphenols from hops to form stable haze complexes. Combined with oats, this pushes total adjunct contribution to 25-35% of the grist.
Optional Gabes (0-10%)
Honey malt (2-5%) adds a subtle sweetness. Carapils or Dextrine malt (3-5%) boosts body. Some brewers add a small charge of acidulated malt (1-2%) for mash pH adjustment.
Reference Schüttung (5-Gallon Batch)
| Zutat | Weight (lb) | Anteil |
|---|---|---|
| 2-Row Pale Malt | 7.0 | 53.8% |
| Flaked Oats | 2.5 | 19.2% |
| Flaked Wheat | 1.5 | 11.5% |
| Honey Malt | 1.0 | 7.7% |
| Carapils | 1.0 | 7.7% |
| Total | 13.0 | 100% |
Target an OG of 1.065-1.072 for a standard NEIPA, or 1.075-1.085 for a Double/Imperial version.
Wasserchemie: The Chloride-Forward Profil
Water is arguably the single most important variable in NEIPA brewing. The goal is a chloride-forward profile that accentuates perceived softness and sweetness while minimizing sulfate-driven Bittere perception.
Target Mineral Profil
| Ion | Target (ppm) | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Chloride (Cl) | 150-200 | Enhances body, fullness, sweetness perception |
| Sulfate (SO4) | 50-75 | Minimal; reduces perceived Bittere sharpness |
| Calcium (Ca) | 75-100 | Yeast health, enzyme function |
| Magnesium (Mg) | 5-15 | Yeast nutrient (cofactor) |
| Sodium (Na) | 25-50 | Rounds out Mundgefühl |
| Bicarbonate (HCO3) | < 50 | Keep low for pale beer pH |
Building From RO or Distilled Water
Start with reverse-osmosis or distilled water to eliminate variables. Add calcium chloride (CaCl2) to hit your chloride and calcium targets simultaneously. A small addition of gypsum (CaSO4) provides the remaining sulfate. Use lactic acid (88%) or phosphoric acid (10%) to bring mash pH to 5.2-5.4.
A typical salt addition for 5 gallons of RO water: 8-10 g CaCl2 in the mash, 2-3 g CaCl2 in the sparge, and 1-2 g gypsum total.
The Cl:SO4 Ratio
Aim for a ratio of 2:1 to 3:1 chloride-to-sulfate. This is the inverse of a West Coast IPA profile (which runs 1:2 or higher in favor of sulfate). The high chloride profile supports the perception of juiciness and rounds out any residual Bittere from the massive hop load.
For more on building Wasserprofils from scratch, see our Wasserchemie Brewing Guide.
Yeast: Why London Ale III Dominates
Wyeast 1318 / WLP066 / Imperial A38 Juice
London Ale III (Wyeast 1318) has become the default NEIPA yeast for good reason:
- Low-medium Flockung: Stays in suspension, contributing to haze
- Fruity ester production: Complements tropical and citrus hop character
- Moderate Vergärungsgrad (71-75%): Leaves residual sweetness and body
- Wide temperature range: Performs well at 64-74 degF, with increased ester production at the higher end
Pitch at 66-68 degF and allow a free rise to 70-72 degF after 48 hours. This controlled rise maximizes ester production without generating fusel alcohols.
Alternative Strains
| Strain | Lab | Key Traits | Vergärungsgrad |
|---|---|---|---|
| WY1318 London Ale III | Wyeast | Benchmark NEIPA yeast, fruity, low-floc | 71-75% |
| WLP066 London Fog | White Labs | WY1318 equivalent | 73-77% |
| Imperial A38 Juice | Imperial Yeast | Sourced from same lineage | 72-76% |
| Lallemand Verdant IPA | Lallemand | Dry yeast option, very low floc | 72-78% |
| S-04 | Fermentis | Budget option, higher floc, cleaner | 73-77% |
Anstellrate
For a standard-gravity NEIPA (1.065-1.072), pitch 200-250 billion cells. This typically means two fresh liquid packs with a production date within 30 days, or one pack with a 1.5 L starter. Underpitching leads to excessive ester production and potential Fehlaromen; overpitching can reduce the fruity character you want.
For a deeper dive into yeast cell counting and viability assessment, see our Yeast Health Viability Guide.
Hopping Strategy: The Biotransformation Dry Hop
This is where the NEIPA diverges most radically from traditional IPA brewing. The goal is maximum hop flavor and aroma with minimal harsh Bittere.
Bittering Gabe (60 min): Minimal
Add just enough hops at 60 minutes to provide a baseline Bittere structure. Target 10-15 IBU from this addition. A single ounce (28 g) of a neutral bittering hop like Magnum or Warrior is sufficient.
Whirlpool / Hop Stand (170-180 degF): Heavy
After flameout, cool to 170-180 degF (77-82 degC) and add 3-5 oz (85-140 g) of your feature hops. Hold for 20-30 minutes. At these temperatures, isomerization is minimal (roughly 10-15% of a full boil addition), so you extract oil-based flavor and aroma compounds without significant Bittere.
Biotransformation Dry Hop: The Key Gabe
Add 3-5 oz (85-140 g) of hops directly to the Gärbehälter 24-72 hours after pitching yeast, while Gärung is still highly active (typically at or near high krausen). During active Gärung, yeast enzymes (particularly alcohol dehydrogenase and esterase) biotransform hop compounds:
- Geraniol is converted to beta-citronellol (intensified citrus character)
- Linalool is modified into more complex aromatic compounds
- Hop glycosides are cleaved, releasing bound flavor molecules
This process creates flavors that cannot be achieved by Kalthopfung post-Gärung.
Post-Gärung Dry Hop (Optional)
Some brewers add a second Dry Hop charge of 2-3 oz (57-85 g) after Gärung is complete (stable gravity for 48 hours) to layer additional fresh hop aroma on top of the biotransformed base.
Reference Hopfenplan (5-Gallon Batch)
| Timing | Hops | Menge (oz) | Zweck |
|---|---|---|---|
| 60 min | Magnum | 0.5 | Baseline Bittere (12 IBU) |
| Whirlpool (175 degF, 20 min) | Citra + Galaxy | 2.0 + 2.0 | Flavor/aroma base |
| Dry Hop 1 (Day 2, active ferm) | Citra + Mosaic | 2.0 + 2.0 | Biotransformation |
| Dry Hop 2 (Day 10, post-ferm) | Galaxy + Nelson Sauvin | 1.5 + 1.0 | Aroma layering |
Total hop load: 11 oz (312 g) for 5 gallons. This is 2.2 oz/gal, which is typical for the style.
For a comprehensive guide to optimizing every addition in your Hopfenplan, see our Hopfenplan Optimization Guide.
The Haze: Science and Stability
NEIPA haze is not the same as chill haze in a poorly brewed lager. It is a stable, permanent colloidal suspension created by specific interactions:
Protein-Polyphenol Complexes
Hop polyphenols bind with grain-derived proteins (particularly from oats and wheat) to form colloidal complexes that remain in suspension. The size of these particles (typically 0.1-10 micrometers) scatters light, creating the characteristic turbidity.
Yeast in Suspension
Low-flocculating Hefestämme like WY1318 remain partially suspended, contributing to haze and Mundgefühl. This is why high-Flockung strains like WLP002 or US-05 are poor choices for the style.
Dry Hop Creep and Polyphenol Loading
Heavy Kalthopfung introduces additional polyphenols and can also cause “Dry Hop creep,” where diastatic enzymes on hop matter convert residual dextrins into fermentable sugars, slightly drying out the beer and potentially causing overKarbonisierung in packaged beer. Monitor gravity carefully after Kalthopfung.
What Does NOT Cause Haze
Flour or wheat flour additions, pectin, and starches from improper mashing are not appropriate haze sources. They create an unstable, gritty turbidity that settles out unevenly and tastes wrong.
Gärung and Packaging
Gärung Schedule
| Day | Action | Temperature |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | Pitch yeast, oxygenate well (30-45 sec pure O2) | 66 degF |
| 1-2 | Active Gärung begins, add biotransformation Dry Hop | 66-68 degF |
| 3-5 | Allow free rise | 68-72 degF |
| 7-10 | Check gravity stability, add post-ferm Dry Hop if desired | 70 degF |
| 12-14 | Cold crash to 34 degF (controversial for haze; optional) | 34 degF |
| 14-16 | Package | — |
To Cold Crash or Not
Cold crashing drops yeast and hop matter out of suspension, reducing haze. Many NEIPA brewers skip it entirely or do a very short crash (24-36 hours at 38 degF) to drop the heaviest sediment without stripping haze. If you do crash, use a closed transfer system to avoid oxygen ingress during the temperature drop (the headspace contraction will pull air through any open blow-off).
Packaging: Oxygen Is the Enemy
NEIPA is extremely sensitive to dissolved oxygen. Oxidation rapidly degrades hop oils and turns the bright, juicy character into a dull, brown, cardboard-flavored mess. Best practices:
- Purge kegs or bottles with CO2 before filling
- Use a closed transfer from Gärbehälter to keg
- If bottling, use oxygen-absorbing caps and fill from the bottom
- Consume within 3-4 weeks for peak flavor
Troubleshooting Common NEIPA Issues
| Problem | Wahrscheinliche Ursache | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Haze drops out after 2 weeks | Insufficient protein, high-floc yeast | Increase oats/wheat to 30%+ total, use WY1318 |
| Harsh, lingering Bittere | Too much 60-min Hopfengabe, high sulfate | Cut bittering charge, reduce sulfate below 75 ppm |
| Astringent or grassy flavor | Dry hop left too long (>5 days) | Remove Dry Hop material after 3-4 days |
| OverKarbonisierung in bottles | Dry hop creep | Ensure terminal gravity is reached before packaging |
| Muddy, brown color | Oxidation post-packaging | Minimize all O2 exposure; closed transfers only |
| Thin body, too dry | Mash temp too low, over-Vergärungsgrad | Mash at 154-156 degF; consider less attenuative yeast |
Scaling and Efficiency Anmerkungen
The reference recipe above assumes 72% Sudhausausbeute. If your system runs lower (common for BIAB setups with high adjunct loads), increase total grain by the appropriate percentage. Flaked oats and wheat can cause stuck sparges in traditional Maischebottichs; consider adding rice hulls (0.5 lb per 5 gallons) if you experience flow issues.
Sources
- BJCP 2021 Style Guidelines, Category 21C: Hazy IPA. Beer Judge Certification Program, 2021.
- Janish, S. The New IPA: Scientific Guide to Hop Aroma and Flavor. Self-published, 2018.
- Palmer, J. and Kaminski, C. Water: A Comprehensive Guide for Brewers. Brewers Publications, 2013.
- Brungard, M. Bru’n Water Spreadsheet Documentation, v4.0, 2022.
- Lafontaine, S.R. and Shellhammer, T.H. “Impact of static dry-hopping rate on the sensory and analytical profiles of beer.” Journal of the Institute of Brewing, 124(4), 434-442, 2018.
- Wyeast Laboratories. Product Data Sheet: 1318 London Ale III. Wyeast.com, 2023.