TasunkaWitko
Well-Known Member
My advice is to not try so many different techniques at once and get down to some fundamentals.
Buy 3 or 4 pre-packaged mixes of interesting-looking IPAs, use a good spring water that you like, and start with that, following the directions that come with the mixes. I like these, but there are a LOT of options out there:
http://brooklynbrewshop.com/beer-making-mixes
Put the engineering books away. This is brewing beer. People have been doing it for 10 or 12 thousand years. Housewives did it. Farmers who could barely write their own names did it. Brew those mixes as if you're cooking an anniversary dinner for your wife, rather than splicing genes for a test tube baby - and add a little love to the process.
Allow an extra week for fermentation; allow at least three weeks after bottling, followed by one in the refrigerator, and see if there's any improvement.
Will it help? Maybe, maybe not. But I am willing to bet that you'll pick up a lot of fundamentals to the whole process and concept that you didn't notice before.
Buy 3 or 4 pre-packaged mixes of interesting-looking IPAs, use a good spring water that you like, and start with that, following the directions that come with the mixes. I like these, but there are a LOT of options out there:
http://brooklynbrewshop.com/beer-making-mixes
Put the engineering books away. This is brewing beer. People have been doing it for 10 or 12 thousand years. Housewives did it. Farmers who could barely write their own names did it. Brew those mixes as if you're cooking an anniversary dinner for your wife, rather than splicing genes for a test tube baby - and add a little love to the process.
Allow an extra week for fermentation; allow at least three weeks after bottling, followed by one in the refrigerator, and see if there's any improvement.
Will it help? Maybe, maybe not. But I am willing to bet that you'll pick up a lot of fundamentals to the whole process and concept that you didn't notice before.