So, thanks to you guys I have the itch.
I just finished my first batch and it's drinkable. It came out like a malty bitter, nothing great but I've learned enough to attempt a better brew.
For my maiden batch, I started with a Munton's millennium ale kit which is meant for only a 2 gallon batch. I added 1.3kg (2.9 lbs) of pale LME and 0.75oz of Williamette. I boiled it all up in 2-3 gallons of water for 60 min and cooled it in an ice bath. Then I transferred it to a 6gal glass carboy. It stayed in the carboy in my basement for 13 days. My basement temperature varies a lot throughout the day. At night the temps hit 56 F, and during the day it goes up to 68 F.
Boiling wort pic and here's the ghetto way I filled the rest of the carboy with water:
Bottled brew:
After letting it sit in the bottle for 6 days I poured a glass (I couldn't wait any longer):
I've learned a lot since brewing this batch like:
-Allowing the wort to boil without the lid on.
-Cooling the wort as fast as possible after boiling.
-Keeping the beer at a stable temperature during fermentation and higher temperature than 60 F for Ales.
-Auto siphons are amazing!
I've already put together an immersion chiller:
Personally, I love dark beers like stouts or porters, so my next attempt will be one. In the Brewsmith trial I slapped together a recipe for extract and steeping.
Malts, sugars:
3.9 kg (8.6 lbs) Pale LME
0.5 kg (1.1 lbs) Black Patent Malt
0.5 kg (1.1 lbs) Crystal Malt
0.25 kg (0.6 lbs) Chocolate Malt
0.25 kg (0.6 lbs) Roasted Barley
0.1 kg (0.2 lbs) Molasses
Hops:
1 oz Bullion hops (60 min)
1 oz First Gold hops (60 min)
1.25 oz Williamette (20 min)
1 oz First Gold hop (dry hops)
I want to know if you think this recipe will work. I don't have a sparge setup and I'm kitchen bound, so I'm hoping steeping will be enough to extract the goodness from those malts.
I'm also working on a temperature controlled chamber with a microprocessor control. I've got the temperature working and writing the temperature to a USB drive every second. This is how I discovered my basement temps. I'll post more details when it's finished.
I just finished my first batch and it's drinkable. It came out like a malty bitter, nothing great but I've learned enough to attempt a better brew.
For my maiden batch, I started with a Munton's millennium ale kit which is meant for only a 2 gallon batch. I added 1.3kg (2.9 lbs) of pale LME and 0.75oz of Williamette. I boiled it all up in 2-3 gallons of water for 60 min and cooled it in an ice bath. Then I transferred it to a 6gal glass carboy. It stayed in the carboy in my basement for 13 days. My basement temperature varies a lot throughout the day. At night the temps hit 56 F, and during the day it goes up to 68 F.
Boiling wort pic and here's the ghetto way I filled the rest of the carboy with water:

Bottled brew:

After letting it sit in the bottle for 6 days I poured a glass (I couldn't wait any longer):

I've learned a lot since brewing this batch like:
-Allowing the wort to boil without the lid on.
-Cooling the wort as fast as possible after boiling.
-Keeping the beer at a stable temperature during fermentation and higher temperature than 60 F for Ales.
-Auto siphons are amazing!
I've already put together an immersion chiller:

Personally, I love dark beers like stouts or porters, so my next attempt will be one. In the Brewsmith trial I slapped together a recipe for extract and steeping.
Malts, sugars:
3.9 kg (8.6 lbs) Pale LME
0.5 kg (1.1 lbs) Black Patent Malt
0.5 kg (1.1 lbs) Crystal Malt
0.25 kg (0.6 lbs) Chocolate Malt
0.25 kg (0.6 lbs) Roasted Barley
0.1 kg (0.2 lbs) Molasses
Hops:
1 oz Bullion hops (60 min)
1 oz First Gold hops (60 min)
1.25 oz Williamette (20 min)
1 oz First Gold hop (dry hops)
I want to know if you think this recipe will work. I don't have a sparge setup and I'm kitchen bound, so I'm hoping steeping will be enough to extract the goodness from those malts.
I'm also working on a temperature controlled chamber with a microprocessor control. I've got the temperature working and writing the temperature to a USB drive every second. This is how I discovered my basement temps. I'll post more details when it's finished.