McGarnigle
Well-Known Member
I'm imagining some corporate accountants are reading this thread for ideas on how to cook their books.
For the Rochefort 6 clone it's going to be about $52 and at $5.29 per 11oz bottle that would be ~$306 in the store.
johnnyspade said:Are you working off a recipe here you wouldn't mind sharing? I love that beer.
I prefer abstract imprressionist brewing myself.
Well, unless you have some careful cost accounting, or had a clearly managed "beer budget" before and after, it's basically impossible to say you're 'saving' money. But I can say I have a lot more beer flowing through my garage now and I don't think I'm spending more money. Plus, I never had anything "on-tap" before Homebrewing.
2nd best quote in this thread![]()
In my case I know beyond a doubt that I'm saving money. For my very first batch my entire kit plus brewing supplies cost $120.00 and produced 66 beers. 5 cases of equivilant beer in my neck of the woods runs about $125.00plus tax. So even with buying odd bits of hardware, travel costs and such I'm still coming out ahead. Plus I'm having fun so that's gotta be worth something too![]()
Now I'm curious - what came in #1?
Living in Canada as well it is way cheaper to make your own. I recently bought a 12 pack of ricards dark and it cost me over 24 dollars. (and its not that great) The cheapest beers I can buy are about 19 dollars for a 12 pack of cans. (really low grade) I bought a 4 pack of guinness cans about a month ago (That costs 17 dollars) Also the selection for microbreweries is very small and very expensive.(Sam adams boston lager costs 14.20 for a six pack) The homebrew ale I bottled today cost me about 33 cents a bottle.
I'll rephrase my original statement: it's no doubt that home brewed beer is less expensive on a per unit basis - I've done detailed economic analysis on brewing based on batch sizes and production rates.
My proposal was that in agregate the amount of money I spend on beer is not less - I just go through a lot more beer these days. There was a time where 5 gallons of beer in bottled case form could last many, many months. Now 5 gallons can go in a couple weeks (or even a single day sometimes) depending on who happens to be in the neighborhood.
Number 1 was:
"My friends are the ones saving money. The other day a buddy came by to borrow my trailer and I gave him four 22oz beers. He borrows my trailer and I give him beer? How screwed up is that?"
But I got a good laugh from yours as well![]()
I'm putting a donation box on my kegerator.
I applaud BornFrustrated for recognizing that start up/equipment/fixed costs must count but can be spread across all batches.
But can you buy Great Lakes by the case? That knocks down its per bottle cost a little (although not to $1 a bottle).