Hi everyone!
I'm a new brewer that's been lurking on here since I made cider from my own apples a couple months ago. I come from the land of Northern Brewer/Midwest Supplies, but was shocked to find out that both of these places are online only. Apparently this must be a dying fad hobby.
I was going to get into this about 15 years ago, and my ex had bought me a "starter kit", but the kit never got picked up. I had a surplus of apples this year and decided to juice the apples and make cider. An investment of $20 got me a couple 1 gal carboys, stoppers and airlocks, some 1 step, and 6 packets of yeast. I made some pretty good apple cider and didn't have it around long enough to age.
Facebook, creepily from all of the cider research, showed me a "I bought a ton of home brew stuff a few years ago and now I want it gone" listing and I picked it up for next to nothing. I got a kettle with a lid, 2 6.5 pails and a bottling pail with lids, 2 6 gal carboys, thermometer, hydrometer, 2 cases of bottles, bottle caps and capper, auto-siphon, a wine thief, and a couple extract kits that have darkened syrup for a couple Jacksons.
I picked up some yeast from RiteBrew (S-04 and S-33). Brewed on an old 1100w hotplate in the garage with filtered well water. It took longer than expected to boil a 2.5 gallon partial, but it did boil. Boiled the DME, then hops at times intervals, then dumped the LME when I had 15 minutes left of the 60 minute boil. It also seemed to be taking forever to cool, and I was using an ice bath that I added ice to multiple times, but I realized that my thermometer probe was stuck high and I was actually 20 degrees below yeast pitch temp (58f). I warmed about a gallon in the microwave and got it up to 100f, got the bucket up to 70+-f, had the S-04 hydrated and pitched it. The next morning the airlock was bubbling and it has been for 3 days straight.
Lessons learned, so far, are that I'll have to at least get a better cooktop for brewing, I'll need a better thermometer that reads accurately, and I'll need more pails and bottles because I think I'm already addicted and I haven't even finished fermenting yet.
Anyway, I hope that I can get as much advice as I can to be as good as I can at this, within the limitations of my garage and basement, and hopefully can help someone else out eventually.
I'm a new brewer that's been lurking on here since I made cider from my own apples a couple months ago. I come from the land of Northern Brewer/Midwest Supplies, but was shocked to find out that both of these places are online only. Apparently this must be a dying fad hobby.
I was going to get into this about 15 years ago, and my ex had bought me a "starter kit", but the kit never got picked up. I had a surplus of apples this year and decided to juice the apples and make cider. An investment of $20 got me a couple 1 gal carboys, stoppers and airlocks, some 1 step, and 6 packets of yeast. I made some pretty good apple cider and didn't have it around long enough to age.
Facebook, creepily from all of the cider research, showed me a "I bought a ton of home brew stuff a few years ago and now I want it gone" listing and I picked it up for next to nothing. I got a kettle with a lid, 2 6.5 pails and a bottling pail with lids, 2 6 gal carboys, thermometer, hydrometer, 2 cases of bottles, bottle caps and capper, auto-siphon, a wine thief, and a couple extract kits that have darkened syrup for a couple Jacksons.
I picked up some yeast from RiteBrew (S-04 and S-33). Brewed on an old 1100w hotplate in the garage with filtered well water. It took longer than expected to boil a 2.5 gallon partial, but it did boil. Boiled the DME, then hops at times intervals, then dumped the LME when I had 15 minutes left of the 60 minute boil. It also seemed to be taking forever to cool, and I was using an ice bath that I added ice to multiple times, but I realized that my thermometer probe was stuck high and I was actually 20 degrees below yeast pitch temp (58f). I warmed about a gallon in the microwave and got it up to 100f, got the bucket up to 70+-f, had the S-04 hydrated and pitched it. The next morning the airlock was bubbling and it has been for 3 days straight.
Lessons learned, so far, are that I'll have to at least get a better cooktop for brewing, I'll need a better thermometer that reads accurately, and I'll need more pails and bottles because I think I'm already addicted and I haven't even finished fermenting yet.
Anyway, I hope that I can get as much advice as I can to be as good as I can at this, within the limitations of my garage and basement, and hopefully can help someone else out eventually.