 |
|
06-25-2008, 07:38 PM
|
#1
|
|
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Outside Philly, Pennsylvania
Posts: 118
|
Another Cost Related Question
|
|
I just bottled my witbier on Monday and that primary fermenter is looking pretty lonely. Only solution is to brew more beer.
I have two beers that I want to brew, but with the whole American economic situation I'm just wondering which one would be the least expensive.
I'm thinking either a chocolate oatmeal stout or a sierra nevada pale ale clone. The pale ale recipe looks like this:
2.2 0.25 lbs. Crystal 60L America 1.034 60
93.3 10.50 lbs. Pale Malt(2-row) America 1.036 2
4.4 0.50 lbs. Cara-Pils Dextrine Malt 1.033 2
1.00 oz. Cascade Pellet 5.80 0.0 Dry Hop
1.00 oz. Cascade Pellet 5.80 4.3 1 min.
0.50 oz. Perle Pellet 7.70 4.6 15 min.
1.00 oz. Magnum Pellet 13.10 64.5 90 min.
WYeast 1056 Amercan Ale/Chico
I don't have an Oatmeal Stout recipe yet, but I'm not sure which will run up the bill. I know Hop prices are crazy, but all types of gain and oat prices are on the rise too. I think I could probably save some money by switching to dry yeast, but I know I want to stick with DME (I've had much better luck).
I guess it really doesn't matter which one (i'll be happy either way). I can't see brewing any double/tripple ipas anytime soon, but I think I can make some great beers on a more limited budget.
__________________
Primary: Ó Flannagáin Standard Stout
Bottled: Pale Ale V1 (made with Crystal 40) || Pale Ale V2 (made with Crystal 15)
Planning: Bitter
Commercial: Dogfish Head Indian Brown || Sierra Nevada Anniversary
|
|
|
06-25-2008, 07:44 PM
|
#2
|
|
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Eastern Colorado
Posts: 5,794
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by landis
...with the whole American economic situation I'm just wondering which one would be the least expensive.
|
Go AG..>(Build your Mash Tun..>See the stickey)
Then make BM's Cream of the crops....It's like a $14.00 batch if you can do AG.
Best practice for your current situation....Go to AHS and Midwest...price each recipe at each place and see what you come up with.
__________________
Seriously. I'm here for BEER
It's Not The Size Of Your Rig That Counts....It's How Often You Use It.
Quote:
Originally Posted by TxBrew
This forum is like America's money spread. 90% of the posts were created by 1% of the community.
|
|
|
|
06-25-2008, 07:54 PM
|
#3
|
|
Flyfisherman/brewer
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 4,914
|
For the most part anything with less hops will be cheaper. For the oatmeal stout for example you can use a high alpha acid hop for the bittering addition which means you need very little. Anything with any kind of hop flavour will require more money in hops which will cost quite a bit more than any grain.
If it were me I'd brew the oatmeal stout (in fact I am this weekend  ) but I do loves me some stout!
|
|
|
06-26-2008, 01:35 AM
|
#4
|
|
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 2,232
|
+1 for BigKahuna-go AG. DME isn't cheap. You could make 2 normal strength beers (cost of base grain) for the cost of 6.6# DME, which will yield 1 batch (at least at my LHBS).
|
|
|
06-26-2008, 03:31 AM
|
#5
|
|
Flyfisherman/brewer
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 4,914
|
Did you two guys read the recipe he posted? There's no extract in it.
Gotta convert the converted I guess. 
|
|
|
06-26-2008, 06:11 AM
|
#6
|
|
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Ventura, CA
Posts: 428
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by avidhomebrewer
+1 for BigKahuna-go AG. DME isn't cheap. You could make 2 normal strength beers (cost of base grain) for the cost of 6.6# DME, which will yield 1 batch (at least at my LHBS).
|
Amen to DME being f*cking expensive.
I just found out that my not-so-local HBS store in the San Fernando Valley not only has a lovely selection of whole grains, but they have a grain mill right there that I guess I could run my grains through.
I want to get a half dozen to a dozen batches under my belt, and then I'm seriously thinking of taking the plunge into AG.
|
|
|
06-26-2008, 06:19 AM
|
#7
|
|
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Eastern Colorado
Posts: 5,794
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by bradsul
Did you two guys read the recipe he posted? There's no extract in it.
Gotta convert the converted I guess. 
|
Got Me.
I Didn't read it very close....My Bad
__________________
Seriously. I'm here for BEER
It's Not The Size Of Your Rig That Counts....It's How Often You Use It.
Quote:
Originally Posted by TxBrew
This forum is like America's money spread. 90% of the posts were created by 1% of the community.
|
|
|
|
06-26-2008, 01:30 PM
|
#8
|
|
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Outside Philly, Pennsylvania
Posts: 118
|
I guess I'm the dumb one posting the all grain recipe. I was actually going to go extract with steeping grains (I don't have the right equipment right now i.e. large enough boil pot/propane burner).
I went to the LHBS last night just to "look around" and gather some prices. I saw they had one of those pre-made West Coast Pale Ale kits for $50, and $50 is a bit pricey. But I showed the guy my recipe for SNPA clone and we put a kit together with some adjustments (dry yeast instead of liquid, pellet hops instead of whole leaf) and got something together for $40. I think I could have gotten the oatmeal stout for cheaper than that, but $40 for two cases of beer is better than anything I could buy commercially.
I just love the smell of that store - Ah, I can't wait to start brewing this batch. The oatmeal stout will be next up after this clone.
__________________
Primary: Ó Flannagáin Standard Stout
Bottled: Pale Ale V1 (made with Crystal 40) || Pale Ale V2 (made with Crystal 15)
Planning: Bitter
Commercial: Dogfish Head Indian Brown || Sierra Nevada Anniversary
|
|
|
06-26-2008, 02:40 PM
|
#9
|
|
Flyfisherman/brewer
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 4,914
|
$40 for an extract batch (especially one with a fair amount of hops) is pretty decent.
|
|
|
06-26-2008, 05:57 PM
|
#10
|
|
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: South River, NJ
Posts: 2,572
|
All grain with a full boil means more equipment, more gas and water usage, but you're getting more efficiency on your grains and hops. When you start making STRONG IPA's with 3oz of hops you'll really realize the savings. Heck, I made arrogant bastard and it only had 4oz of hops on a partial boil. It would be like 3 on a full boil.
__________________
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~___//_ ____________________________~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~_/ [][]| | /```\/```\/```\/```\/```\ |~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~_/_______| |____NOW TRIPLE HOPPED______|~~~~~~~~~~
~~~___/[_]| 00 /| | \,,,/\,,,/\,,,/\,,,/\,,,/ |~~~~~~~~~~
~~|___|___|___/_| |___________________________|~~~~~~~~~~
~~|=(*)[________]==(*)(*)=| \________/=(*)(*)=|~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
| Thread Tools |
|
|
| Display Modes |
Linear Mode
|
|
|