I love how these guys write these articles like they were the ones who discovered that people brew beer as a hobby. Also, they act like 2011 (or 2010, or 2009, or insert year article was written here) is the year of the homebrewing renaissance and that the last 30 years have been the dark ages.
I also like the picture at the top. Some guy with a massive stainless commercial-style rig. There's nothing wrong with that. I'd love to have it. But, the author acts like this is the norm.
Nonetheless, it's a positive article. But, I think it's a little heavy on the talk about laying out wads of cash for commercial grade equipment and a little light on the message you can get into the hobby for about $100, and make good beer.
I was thinking the same thing. When he said
For many people, home brewing summons visions of beat-up equipment that is stashed in a corner of a garage, dragged out only occasionally, powered by modest propane tanks normally attached to the barbecue and yielding just a few gallons. (Professional breweries measure output by the barrel roughly 31 gallons each.)
I was like, hey that's exactly what I do, pull the stuff out of the garage (some of it 20 years old at least) and get it set up to brew. What the hell is wrong with that?