I've always loved beer. I've never brewed beer. Until last Christmas. I got a kit. It was Everyday IPA by Brooklyn Brew Shop.
While I made a few mistakes (future mental notes) but none of them were due to sanitation (maybe I'm not sure.) I ended up with three 16 ounce bottles that were drinkable. (one of my mistakes was I didn't fill back up to the gallon line) I used honey for the bottles and after two weeks the first one was meady. It was unique because it started carbonated crisp and sweet with honey and ended with a really nice finish from the cascade hops. After three weeks I went back to the fridge and this is when I started to notice something different.
The bottle immediately started *gushing* but it wasn't watery frothy it was like solid froth. And it kept *gushing* for a whole minute. The head on that beer was insane and I wish I had kept pictures. I look back and I kick myself. However, I drank that beer and two things. ABV was insane (I didn't have a hydrometer I don't know I'd say between 7-8 easily) and the beer was magnificent. To a first time homebrew it was a success. It made me want to brew again immediately. I even went on to drink the third one with a chicken dinner that my wife made. (It had the same issue tho with an almost thick white solid froth coming out of the bottle for awhile.)
Did the wild yeast from the honey give my beer a gusher infection? And would it still have tasted that awesome if it had that infection? I didn't die.
The beer was in the carboy for 2 weeks and bottles for 2 and 3. It stayed at a good 61 degrees the whole time in the fermenter. I didn't have a meslin bag or any filter other than the sieve for the all grain boil. I didn't throw the hops how it told me to. Everything else was by the book.
So, now I'm onto my next beer. Also a kit. I want to do a few kits and make sure I can brew just a gallon without incident. When I feel like I want to I already have a brew shop that sells everything I need. I'll graduate to the 5 gallon batches.
The current beer I'm brewing is a craftabrew hefeweizen. malt extract. (so i can compare different kits and different methods.)
It's in the carboy still and the only question I have on that one is is it usual for after 12 days for the bubbling to pick back up? I only check it at night I don't like how bright it is and warm it is here in southern California. The krausen is dried to the sides. It fell after about 4 days. It smells good and it looks good, but just when I get home from work I try to tell it a good night story while I watch it. every 10 seconds a few big bubbles rise up out of the trudge. The top looks a tad slimy with a lot of groups of bubbles but no discoloration. (ive looked at the pictures of infections and every one i see where someone says that just looks like co2 bubbles fits what my beer looks like)
On tuesday here it will be time for me to bottle. Any questions or answers or tips or just comment I am very open for critique and I want to learn this. I dont really have any hobbies and this is fun to learn the science. I got the how to brew book that ive been reading and a bit of it is over my head but I love it.
While I made a few mistakes (future mental notes) but none of them were due to sanitation (maybe I'm not sure.) I ended up with three 16 ounce bottles that were drinkable. (one of my mistakes was I didn't fill back up to the gallon line) I used honey for the bottles and after two weeks the first one was meady. It was unique because it started carbonated crisp and sweet with honey and ended with a really nice finish from the cascade hops. After three weeks I went back to the fridge and this is when I started to notice something different.
The bottle immediately started *gushing* but it wasn't watery frothy it was like solid froth. And it kept *gushing* for a whole minute. The head on that beer was insane and I wish I had kept pictures. I look back and I kick myself. However, I drank that beer and two things. ABV was insane (I didn't have a hydrometer I don't know I'd say between 7-8 easily) and the beer was magnificent. To a first time homebrew it was a success. It made me want to brew again immediately. I even went on to drink the third one with a chicken dinner that my wife made. (It had the same issue tho with an almost thick white solid froth coming out of the bottle for awhile.)
Did the wild yeast from the honey give my beer a gusher infection? And would it still have tasted that awesome if it had that infection? I didn't die.
The beer was in the carboy for 2 weeks and bottles for 2 and 3. It stayed at a good 61 degrees the whole time in the fermenter. I didn't have a meslin bag or any filter other than the sieve for the all grain boil. I didn't throw the hops how it told me to. Everything else was by the book.
So, now I'm onto my next beer. Also a kit. I want to do a few kits and make sure I can brew just a gallon without incident. When I feel like I want to I already have a brew shop that sells everything I need. I'll graduate to the 5 gallon batches.
The current beer I'm brewing is a craftabrew hefeweizen. malt extract. (so i can compare different kits and different methods.)
It's in the carboy still and the only question I have on that one is is it usual for after 12 days for the bubbling to pick back up? I only check it at night I don't like how bright it is and warm it is here in southern California. The krausen is dried to the sides. It fell after about 4 days. It smells good and it looks good, but just when I get home from work I try to tell it a good night story while I watch it. every 10 seconds a few big bubbles rise up out of the trudge. The top looks a tad slimy with a lot of groups of bubbles but no discoloration. (ive looked at the pictures of infections and every one i see where someone says that just looks like co2 bubbles fits what my beer looks like)
On tuesday here it will be time for me to bottle. Any questions or answers or tips or just comment I am very open for critique and I want to learn this. I dont really have any hobbies and this is fun to learn the science. I got the how to brew book that ive been reading and a bit of it is over my head but I love it.