Hex
Well-Known Member
My Mom just made two cherry pies from cherries I picked yesterday from her two Bing cherry trees. We opened one just now, fresh out of the oven. Mmmmm the house sure smells good, think I'll have a slice....
AZ_IPA said:
I look at it this way.
You tell a friend how much a batch of beer costs you. "Wow!!!" he says, "Only $5/case? Then it's no big deal if I drink as much of your beer as I want, right? I'll reimburse you if necessary."
"You're already drinking my beer."
"Yeah, but I didn't realize how cheap it was. I'm coming over every night from now on to get hammered!"
"Oh come on, that's a bit overboard..."
"It's just $5 a case, right? So what's the big deal? I'll give you $5 a night if you want... it's cheaper than a drink at the bar."
"Well, yeah, it's $5 in ingredients, but..."
And that "but" is the real cost of making homebrew.
remilard said:Well done. If people don't understand that, it's time to give up.
Well done. If people don't understand that, it's time to give up.
Airborneguy said:I'll go further than cirimie and say that the example was flawed. To quantify a savings, the beer has to be compared to something. I started out by saying that I believe when compared to a similar beer, home brew is cheaper. Ie, I can produce a RIS for less coin than an RIS would cost me at retail value. Emjays example only speaks to actual costs involved and then has the producer being offered the actual cost. It does not answer to the value that the beer has for emjay relative to what he would spend commercially. What if his friend offered less than cost? He now losses money, but relative to nothing because the reason for the value his friend offered is not being compared to any similarly priced item but rather the cost expended to produce his version.
I think this whole I brew a batch for $5 crap is just another example of people needing to measure penis size by proxy online because we can't just whip em out.
Join a real club, everyone knows who the brewers are, and nobody is going to walk up to a good brewer and brag about their efficiency or how they only buy one package of yeast a year.
Sweetchuck said:You also have to consider:
Utilities (probably use 10 times the water to make a batch of beer, gas/electric)
Nah, because you completely left out what I'd be doing with that time if I wasn't brewing. 6-7 hours out of the house drinking $4 pints adds up fast. Then there's the damned stripper who expects at least a dollar a song...Just looking at the list of true costs, I'd say it might be closer to 5 or 10 times cheaper to just buy the stuff.
Water bill $26 month. If your math is right and I use 10 times the water on brew day, I spend about $4 on water. I use no electricity and based on a $16 propane tank that I get 5 batches from. TOTAL this category- $7
False pretense. This is a dollars and sense argument. ie when comparing prices, it's an accounting discussion - not an economic one. In accounting, not everything has a value. Theoretical labor value doesn't apply.
My camry gets 26 mpg. Homebrew store is 10 miles away and typically I get 2 batches worth every trip. So, 90% of one gallon roundtrip at 3.75 gallon. Call it 3.70 per trip or 1.85 per batch. REALLY? A house cost? Don't think so. I'd have my house if I never brewed again
So my total for these extras is 8.95 per batch (more than I would have thought, by the way: great excercise!). My typical batch materials run me roughly $23. With these extras, my total comes to $32. 8 6-packs of craft will always run me at least $60. So, in the worst case (no bulk grains or re-using yeast) I'm saving at least $28 on the same volume of craft brew. Hardly an increase.
Even if you want to add the cost of equipment in, I'd still say you're way ahead in terms of straight up dollars and sense.
False pretense. This is a dollars and sense argument. ie when comparing prices, it's an accounting discussion - not an economic one. In accounting, not everything has a value. Theoretical labor value doesn't apply.
You kinda made yourself look at little foolish here... I was following your side of the discussion but this is a little rediculous. What if you went out for a drink and had 3 and got pulled over and got a DUI? What if that happened? Would the 10 grand in fines suddenly boost your price per pint to $50? I mean if you were at home drinking homebrew it wouldn't have happened... could you just assume this will eventually happen and if you stay home to drink just take this figure off the top of your brewing overhead? How much more convoluted can this discussion get?Sweetchuck said:You have no understanding of fundamental economics then. Can't help you much in this aspect until you develop one.
You're Camry costs what, maybe $25k? I hope you insure that vehicle, add that cost also and it's what - over $5k/year? What's that break down per batch?
I will admit that I will probably never be "incredibly wealthy" or become so by brewing beer but I can say that I can look around and see many others much worse off than I am...
remilard said:Oh and I think these days the federal government considers the cost of driving a mile about 50 cents. This is obviously an hour and excludes the value of that time. If you enjoy driving and don't consider the time to have a cost, god bless you.
If an accountant managed his books like that, it would possibly land him in jail.
remilard said:You have some interesting ideas about accounting. Have you ever read financial statements? They are full of intangible items. Did Sam Adams put all of their goodwill in a bucket and sell it? Where did that come from?
remilard said:If think you should quit your job and make every single product you use. Think about how irrational it is that you are refusing to save all of that money.
The actual cost of your labor to brew a batch of beer for yourself is approximately the amount of money that you would accept to NOT do your very next favorite leisure activity when you already had plans to do it. Sure it's hypothetical but it's better than ignoring it as if that 6 hours had no monetary value.
I can say what I do because I actually do look at financial statements. I'm a consultant - it's my job.
Yup, there are intangibles listed. Simply being listed on the financial statement doesn't mean its being used to determine cost of goods or cost of sale. One thing you'll never find in the profit/loss equation is time. In accounting (and tax code), time has zero value, except for that which has been physically paid for it. Paid, as in real dollars. Time has no inherent value unless somebody has been reimbursed for said time. So you can say "you can discount your labor cost as much as you want, but it's still a cost," because it sounds good, but that's just not true. Unless you are accepting tangible and quantifiable reimbursement for your time, it plays no role in determining the cost of a product.
And as we've determined, none of us are. Therefore, the time we've spent brewing has no actual value. And if we WERE doing it professionally but didn't pay ourselves, we still couldn't account for it in the coat of the product.
It's not irrational at all. It's a simple cash flow equation. I bring in salary, a far larger number than I would save by making my own products.
And that's why you will never resolve this disagreement. Only difference is, Syv is debating for free, while Bobby has potentially spent hundreds of dollars on this discussion![]()