Never mind someone pointed me in the right direction on how doing it, I just don't want to spend $200 on a keg right now. So tablets or prime sugar and I figure prime sugar would be cheaper for the bulk. And I don't want to add each tablet to each bottle wen I can pour about 1 1/2 pounds of the prime sugar in the secondary. My only question is how do I add it? Just pour the amount in? Or boil it first?
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Relax and take a deep breath, lets start with the beginning.
Brewing itself isn't really that hard; I say that if you can make soup, you can make beer.
The difference in beer versus wine and cider is the boil, and needing to cool down before fermentation.
Once fermentation is done, IMMEDIATELY before bottling, you add priming sugar, usually corn sugar, but table will work as well.
You do not need a pound and a half - usually 5 oz is plenty for a 5 gallon batch.
I like to bring about a cup of water to a boil, then dissolve the sugar into it. Bring back to a boil for a minute or 2, then take off heat. I pour it into my bottling bucket, then rack the beer on top of it. This will get the beer off the trub (spent yeast, hops, protein and other smegma at the bottom of the fermenter) and mix the priming solution in.
from there into bottles. I personally mostly use bombers - half as many to clean, sanitize and so forth, but 12-ozers is fine too.
Also, you really want a bigger carboy for fermenting beer. you will need room for the foam to build (krausen, in our terms) without blowing over the top and all over everything. 6.5 gallon carboy is the generally accepted size.
Before you get going, read John Palmer's How to Brew (You can read an old version on line, but there are many things in there he's changed his mind about) and / or Charlie Papazian's Joy of Homebrewing. These are the two best books to get started with brewing.