Two things:
First, meet your neighbors! When I pull my brew stand out in the driveway, the neighbors come over like flies to the light. I have a handful that drink and enjoy the beer, so my 10 gallon batches don't seem to stick around long. In fact, I went in half on ingredients for a cider, and my neighbor took one keg and tossed it in his garage fridge. I had an extra co2 tank/regulator and just a picnic faucet. Brewing is a great social activity, so if you haven't already get some neighbors over there.
Second, you CAN filter, just don't do it between Bk and fermentor. That simply isn't the proper time to do it. My uncle, who I got my equipment from, filtered every batch of his (style permitting) and has a stack of medals to show for the great beer. He favored german style lagers, and they were always crystal clear. He used a morebeer plate filter, but he dropped and broke it literally the day I went to his house to get all the equipment. So I got a filter like you linked, a canister style. It's easy to do with an extra keg and co2.
People can change their drinking habits. They just have to find the right beer. My uncle, who's almost 70 now, drank bud/bud lite since he was in college. (He was drinking bud before bud lite was even invented!)
He literally drank 1 or 2 every day for like 35 years.. then all of a sudden about 10 years ago, he came across Yeungling and enjoyed it. Then he had a blue moon and enjoyed it. Then the flood gates opened. Now he hasn't had a bud in his fridge for that long and has pale ales, craft lagers, reds, browns and your other typical year round offerings. He didn't go so far as the sour trend or barrel aged trend, he sticks with the basics.. but he drinks craft beer and he likes it.
I would love for my brewing to be a "social activity." My immediate neighbors are not very neighborly.
EXAMPLE: At Christmas time my wife, her mother, and her sister-in-law get together and make TONS of cookies. It's an all-day tradition, and usually turns into several days when all is said and done. Needless to say we all end up with plates and plates full of cookies that none of us could ever eat, so we give them away. We moved into this house in 2011 and started bringing plates to the neighbors within a house or two around us. We always got the strangest looks with an uncomfortable "thank you" as if we were breaking some kind of unwritten neighborhood code. We did that for the first 4 years we lived here and it never got any better. The same people would open their door and stare at us with the most suspicious unwelcoming unneighborly looks. So, right or wrong, we stopped doing it. They still make cookies, it's still part of the tradition, and we still give them away - just not to any of our neighbors. We've lived here 6 years and the only neighbor I actually talk to is the guy next door. I don't even know his name and at this point I'm embarrassed to ask. The lady across the street will smile and wave if we are outside at the same time. Other than that it's not a very "neighborly" neighborhood. The old Mexican couple to the left of us don't even speak English. She came over to ask about something i put out on the sidewalk and the neighbor across the street had to come over to translate.
I too brew in my garage with the door open. Most people drive by and slow down to stare, but don't even wave. One time the guy across the street came home and hollered, "You making whiskey?" I said, "No, beer." He just nodded and went in the house.
I've actually cut way back on how much I brew and have even considered selling everything and giving it up all together precisely because it
SHOULD be a social activity and for me - it's not. Most of my friends and family don't drink. Those that do only drink at home because DUI laws have gotten so ridiculous. And of those few who do drink, some drink only wine, some drink only whiskey, and the few who drink beer, drink only Bud Light, or Miller Lite, or Coors Light, etc.
Like I said, trying to come up with a way to filter was in large part trying to appease the Bud Light drinkers and get them to at least
TRY drinking something I brewed. But I've had a slight change of heart since originally posting this. I don't brew that much anymore, (
it's just plain no fun doing it alone). When I do brew I'm cutting the batch size way down, (1 to 2.5 gallons). And I don't care if any of my Bud Light drinking friends try it or not. Now that I'm brewing smaller batches, I'd actually rather they didn't.