Juicy New England IPA Recipe (NEIPA) – Hazy, Tropical, and Packed With Flavor

If you’ve ever had a truly great New England IPA, you know exactly what makes it special.

That huge tropical aroma.
The hazy golden pour.
The soft, juicy mouthfeel.
And almost no harsh bitterness.

A good NEIPA drinks more like fruit juice than a traditional bitter IPA.

That’s exactly what we’re brewing today.

This is my go-to Juicy New England IPA recipe for a 5 gallon batch on the BrewZilla. It’s built to be approachable for homebrewers while still delivering that big, bold hazy IPA character everyone loves.

If you’ve been wanting to brew a proper hazy IPA at home, this is the one.

📺 Watch the Full Brew Day

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Why This NEIPA Recipe Works

A lot of New England IPA recipes overcomplicate things.

Too many hop additions.
Too much bitterness.
Too many unnecessary ingredients.

This one keeps the focus where it belongs:

✔ Big late hop character

✔ Soft mouthfeel

✔ Stable haze

✔ Low perceived bitterness

The goal is simple:

Make a beer that tastes like a glass of tropical juice.

📊 Juicey New England IPA Recipe Stats

  • Batch Size: 5 gallons finished
  • Batch Size (Fermenter): 5.5 gallons
  • Boil Size: 6.25 gallons
  • Brewhouse Efficiency: 70%
  • OG: 1.069–1.072
  • FG: 1.012–1.014
  • ABV: ~7.2–7.6%
  • IBU: ~65
  • Color: Hazy Golden

This puts it right in proper New England IPA territory.

If you’re still learning how gravity and ABV work, this guide helps:
👉 Calculating Alcohol by Volume

🧾 Grain Bill

Grain Bill (5 Gallons)

  • 12 lb US 2-Row Pale Malt
  • 2 lb Flaked Oats
  • 1 lb White Wheat Malt
  • 0.5 lb Carafoam (or Carapils)

Why These Grains Matter

This combination gives you:

  • Oats for creamy mouthfeel
  • Wheat for haze stability
  • Carafoam for body and head retention
  • No crystal malt so the finish stays soft and juicy

If  you’ve never used oats before, this helps:
👉 How to Use Oats In Beer

🌿 Hop Schedule

For a true juicy NEIPA, we want:

  • Tropical fruit
  • Citrus
  • Huge aroma
  • Minimal harsh bitterness

This is where the magic happens.

60 Minutes (Minimal Bittering)

  • 0.5 oz Magnum

This gives clean bitterness without getting aggressive.

Whirlpool (170°F for 20 Minutes)

After the boil, cool to 170°F and add:

  • 2 oz Citra
  • 2 oz Mosaic
  • 1 oz Galaxy

This creates the big tropical backbone.

Dry Hop #1 (Day 3)

  • 2 oz Citra
  • 2 oz Mosaic

Dry Hop #2 (Day 6)

  • 1 oz Citra
  • 1 oz Mosaic
  • 1 oz Galaxy

Total hops: 11.5 oz

If you want to improve your hopping game, read:
👉 Advanced Hopping Techniques

And for dry hopping specifically:
👉 Dry Hopping Techniques

🌪 Whirlpooling (Don’t Skip This)

Whirlpooling is one of the biggest upgrades you can make for hop-forward beers.

After your boil:

  • Turn off heat
  • Cool wort to about 170°F
  • Add whirlpool hops
  • Let steep for 20 minutes

This adds:

  • Huge aroma
  • Big flavor
  • Less harsh bitterness

If you want the full breakdown:
👉 Whirlpooling Beer

🍺 Best Yeast for NEIPA

For this recipe, I strongly recommend:

Lallemand Verdant IPA

This is the best dry yeast option for a juicy NEIPA.

Why?

  • Great fruity ester profile
  • Excellent haze retention
  • Soft mouthfeel
  • Reliable fermentation

You can also use:

  • Wyeast 1318 London Ale III
  • Imperial A38 Juice

Avoid US-05 for this style—it ferments too clean and strips away that juicy character.

More on yeast here:
👉 Guide to Pitching Yeast

🔥 Mash Instructions

Mash at:

152°F (67°C) for 60 minutes

Optional:

Mash Out at 168°F for 10 minutes

This gives a great balance between:

  • Body
  • Fermentability
  • Mouthfeel

If you want to understand mash temperatures better:
👉 Introduction to Mashing Temperatures

And mash out explained here:
👉 What is a Mash Out?

🍻 Fermentation

Pitch yeast at:

66°F

Then allow fermentation to rise to:

68–70°F

Don’t ferment too warm or you’ll lose the clean juicy profile.

Fermentation schedule:

  • Day 0 — Brew and pitch yeast
  • Day 3 — Dry Hop #1
  • Day 6 — Dry Hop #2
  • Day 10–14 — Package

More fermentation help here:
👉 How to Ferment Beer

And temperature control matters a lot:
👉 Guide to Fermentation Temperatures

💧 Water Profile (Very Important)

For a proper NEIPA, water chemistry matters.

Target:

  • Calcium: 100 ppm
  • Chloride: 150–175 ppm
  • Sulfate: 75 ppm

Chloride > Sulfate

This gives:

  • Soft mouthfeel
  • Juicy perception
  • Smooth bitterness

If you’re not adjusting water yet, start learning here:
👉 Brewing Water Chemistry Explained

And this is helpful too:
👉 Benefits of Using Reverse Osmosis Water In Your Beer

🍍 What This Beer Tastes Like

Expect:

  • Mango
  • Pineapple
  • Orange juice
  • Peach
  • Thick mouthfeel
  • Soft bitterness
  • Hazy golden pour

This beer should drink like juice.

That’s the goal.

💡 Pro Tips for Better NEIPA

  • Use the freshest hops possible
  • Don’t skip whirlpooling
  • Keep oxygen exposure low after fermentation
  • Don’t over cold crash
  • Package fresh and drink fresh

NEIPAs are at their best young.

Final Thoughts

If you want to brew a beer that feels like modern craft beer at home…

This is it.

This Juicy New England IPA recipe gives you:

  • Real hazy IPA character
  • Big tropical aroma
  • Soft mouthfeel
  • A recipe that actually works on a BrewZilla

No unnecessary complexity.
Just a proper juicy NEIPA.

🍺 Want to Brew Better Beer Faster?

If you’re serious about improving your brewing, grab my free:

Beginner Brewing Bootcamp

Step-by-step beginner brewing tips without the confusion.

👉 https://make-beer-easy.kit.com/3e41cd775d

And if you want more recipes and brewing guides:

👉 https://makebeereasy.com/brewing-guides/

Cheers,
Big Robb 🍺

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