freakshow10mm
Well-Known Member
Been busy with a ton of other stuff in life, both good and bad. Finally getting around to brewing that Brewer's Best kit I got a year ago for a present. Supposed to be the Continental Pilsner. Going to create this thread as a journal for my first brewing.
Here's the equipment I have:
I need to get a stainless steel boiling pot, thermometer, and hydrometer for sure. The local co-op has brewing stuff there so that's a trip on Friday before work. Also need to get bottles. Unsure what size I'm going to get. The 12oz is a standard, but the pint or magnum would use less caps and less handling. Using pint bottles would reduce the number in a 5 gallon batch by a full dozen bottles. Take up less room too.
The kit comes with lager yeast (dry) that is a couple weeks past "best if used by" date. Luckily one of my co-workers is the brewmaster for Red Jacket Brewing Company (sweet!! :rockin
and he gave me some tips today. Said to toss out the yeast and get some lager yeast from the local place that will be fresh. For cooling the wort, just put the pot outside in the snowbank with lid on and thermometer inside. Check the temperature after a while until it gets down to what the recipe says (60º). Said not to worry about a secondary, just lager it in the fermenter and be done with it. Said if I don't want to wait the time needed to lager it, just ferment it at ale temperature and it should be ready to bottle in 2 weeks, and is actually steam beer (never had that before).
It will be hard to wait the 6 weeks per the recipe before priming/bottling, then additional 2 weeks waiting to carbonate and condition. I might find myself buying another set of buckets and a different kit to pass the time brewing that one. Trouble is I like lager beer and not ale, so I'm not real excited about trying to brew an ale. I'm reluctant to brew another batch before I sample the first one so I can learn from my mistakes. However it might be my chance to try and brew an ale in attempt to pass the time with the lager.
I've also got the BrewPal app for my iPhone but it doesn't have a lot of the ingredients in my kit, so I can't use it properly. Bummer.
Here's the equipment I have:
- Two buckets; one with lid and airlock for the fermenter & one for the primer
- Auto-siphon and tube with the bottle filler gizmo attachment (push to bottom of bottle to fill, lift to stop)
- One-step cleaner
- Stainless steel stirring spoon
- Straining bag
- Bottle capper and caps
I need to get a stainless steel boiling pot, thermometer, and hydrometer for sure. The local co-op has brewing stuff there so that's a trip on Friday before work. Also need to get bottles. Unsure what size I'm going to get. The 12oz is a standard, but the pint or magnum would use less caps and less handling. Using pint bottles would reduce the number in a 5 gallon batch by a full dozen bottles. Take up less room too.
The kit comes with lager yeast (dry) that is a couple weeks past "best if used by" date. Luckily one of my co-workers is the brewmaster for Red Jacket Brewing Company (sweet!! :rockin
It will be hard to wait the 6 weeks per the recipe before priming/bottling, then additional 2 weeks waiting to carbonate and condition. I might find myself buying another set of buckets and a different kit to pass the time brewing that one. Trouble is I like lager beer and not ale, so I'm not real excited about trying to brew an ale. I'm reluctant to brew another batch before I sample the first one so I can learn from my mistakes. However it might be my chance to try and brew an ale in attempt to pass the time with the lager.
I've also got the BrewPal app for my iPhone but it doesn't have a lot of the ingredients in my kit, so I can't use it properly. Bummer.