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  1. K

    Success.

    These were Brewer's best five gallon kits for reference.
  2. K

    Success.

    Hello. The first photo is of an American cream ale. 17 days in the primary and 13 days in the bottle. Probably a little over carbonated. The second photo is of an Irish stout, under carbonated due to measuring error. 14 days in the primary and 13 days in the bottle. I will let the stout mature...
  3. K

    Cloudy cream ale...

    I just bottled an American cream ale and was wondering the exact same thing. Never took the lid off during fermentation and used star san plus totally clean process. It did have a slightly cloudy look to it but tasted and smelled great. A little confusing but i know it produced plenty of...
  4. K

    How long does bottled beer last?

    That was a fascinating article. It brought to mind a few things. I visited the Florida keys where everything had to be shipped in on one highway and it was always hot. I don't think i got a beer handed to me there that was not slightly skunky, just being honest, i am from a cold climate. However...
  5. K

    How long does bottled beer last?

    My plan is to produce 4 cases of 24 at least a month for maybe 12 months. I have two five gallon fermenters and will save one case of each style indefinitely. I want to have 400 plus bottles when done thus drinking one case of each kind every month. I don't know why, maybe I need to go on the...
  6. K

    too much priming sugar

    I learned something dealing with priming sugar, Ounces is a weight measurement and tablespoons is a volume measurement. I typed in to google how many tablespoons are in an ounce and it said 2. Well, no, I am pretty sure they mean water. 1 oz of water is 2 tablespoons. Priming sugar is much...
  7. K

    Beginners Pipeline

    Hi. I just brewed my second and third five gallon batches ever. They were five gallons of American cream ale and five gallons of Irish stout from brewer's best. They are bottle conditioning now. First ever was a red ale but it got infected. :( The first batch I did on an electric kitchen stove...
  8. K

    Patience is The virtue.

    I spy with my little eye, at my local supply store. What's on deck. Fermenters are now empty and next will be a honey brown ale and a Belgian golden ale from brewer's best. The honey brown ale used to be my drink of choice when i was broke.
  9. K

    Finally opened the lid on my first batch and took a picture

    Although it is not a human pathogen. Just from personal experience with my wild yeast beer. I am not sure if you want to put it in your belly. Might be a little discomforting. Just trying to be a friend. We are trying to help. I drank my wild yeast beer and bubbleguts galore. but hey, it is your...
  10. K

    Finally opened the lid on my first batch and took a picture

    Did you use a food grade sanitizer? Just curious. Star san is a brand name of the one that i used. I used sanitizer on my very first batch and it still got infected with wild yeast. It was a red ale but it turned cloudy and was very sour.
  11. K

    First Batch Questions

    One thing they have taught me is that the fermenter can actually breathe in through the airlock when it gets going. If you have star san in your airlock it could suck it in. Just a technicality. I don't think it really matters. It takes up to 72 hours to see signs of fermentation but you said...
  12. K

    Patience is The virtue.

    Gee whiz. My hydrometer was probably 40 degrees! Now that's a newb mistake. Thanks guys.
  13. K

    Patience is The virtue.

    I have been looking at some charts and I think I was reading the brix readings. My hydrometer was also brought in out of a cold garage, can that affect it? I am going to disregard my own attempt at reading this round. Looking at some charts you are right it shouldn't have dropped that far. I...
  14. K

    Patience is The virtue.

    I must be reading the wrong side of my hydrometer. I think it actually says 15 to 10 on the part that says beer start, then the part that says beer finish is 5 to 0. It's a newb hydrometer and actually says beer start and beer finish on it. Anyhow, I read it at around the 10 for OG on cream ale...
  15. K

    Home Brewing = Saving Money?

    I personally don't care about saving money because, is it just me or does the beer taste SO much better 100 percent fresh? I even like the taste of the unfinished sample at bottling time over a can of store bought now. It seems so natural.
  16. K

    Patience is The virtue.

    Does 7 tablespoons of priming sugar in 2 cups of water sound right for the Irish stout? I googled that 1 oz equals 2 tablespoons and the recipe called for 3.5 oz of priming sugar. In any event, if under they won't blow.
  17. K

    Patience is The virtue.

    Hello. I am totally a newb brewer. Just upgraded my equipment and brewed my second and third five gallon batches. I just brewed five gallons of american cream ale and five gallons of irish stout. The american cream ale got into the fermenter and took off then was apparent stuck and I never...
  18. K

    Upgraded my equipment/Worried about the cold

    Seeing as how this is the beginners brewing forum i thought i would say this. I have learned in a short period of time that brewing is not a recipe or a process, however more like an art or a craft. If you are reading my thread as a beginner, i offer these things that i have learned. You're...
  19. K

    Upgraded my equipment/Worried about the cold

    No I have not yet aerated the wort. I have thought about buying a new fish tank pump and stone on a hose. Just cooked and autosiphoned into fermenter. I will have to level up.
  20. K

    Upgraded my equipment/Worried about the cold

    sorry that may have been a little excessive.
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