Hi All. On signing up I got a message asking me to post an intro in the intro forum, but I hope it's OK I sorta combine an intro with a couple of new brewer questions here instead?
Apologies in advance, I tend to be overly verbose. A colleague years ago told me I never use 10 words when 1000 will do.
I've been lurking here for a month or 2 now, leeching a load of helpful information from existing threads. Thought it time I make an account.
I'm 51 and live in London, UK. Thought many times in my life that I wanted to do brewing, but I've always had very limited space, even now my wife and I share a small 1 bedroom flat (US: apartment) with a kitchen that for 2 people to use at the same time, they have to be VERY friendly with each other.... so I always put it off, but in Jan this year my wife was struggling to buy me a birthday present and I suggested a starter homebrew equipment bundle and an extract porter kit, and now here we are with my 4th brew currently fermenting happily away in my new Inkbird fermentation fridge I built last weekend in our store cupboard (with MANY thanks to threads on these boards I used for reference).
I've been a beer snob most of my adult life. I have a large preference for dark beers, preferring a richer darker malt flavour in what I drink. Porters/Stouts, Dunkels, Belgian ales, that sort of thing. The only style I actively dislike is IPA - Pale Ale I love but too much hops are a real turn-off for me. This has made the last decade frustrating when 80% of the supermarket shelf became IPAs. I'm also not a huge fan of the recent popularity of 'hazy' beers, preferring a cleaner mouth-feel.
My first brew, the porter kit was... well I can say it was successful. it successfully completed exactly as it should and the resulting beer was... fine. But honestly one of the most basic porters I've ever drunk, extremely plain with just a simple malt note and nothing interesting or complex about it. Don't get me wrong, I had made my own beer and that was exciting as all hell. I even convinced myself for a few weeks that it was 'good' beer until I was honest with myself that while I was happy I'd made a beer successfully it was very underwhelming.
Then I decided to go a tiny bit more adventurous, still stick to an extract for my second beer but make my own decisions on yeast and hops. The Pale Ale I made was a huge improvement over my first brew in terms of interesting flavour, but I did miscalculate on my hops and dry hopped 50g Goldings & 50g Citra with no hop bag and the result, while not quite being IPA levels of hops, was too hoppy for a Pale Ale. Other than that it was really really good though, I ended up hosting a party for friends, several of whom are or have been homebrewers and they drank me dry of all the Pale Ale in 1 evening, with one of the homebrewers (an all-grain guy) declaring that for my second beer and from an extract it was amazing and it had taken him 5-10 brews before he made anything that good.
The fact that Pale Ale was so good and popular, and that I'd just been drunk dry of it, made me want to repeat it, except with the hops turned down, but that seemed a bit too samey, after all I'm trying to learn and grow and making the exact same beer twice in a row wasn't ideal so I thought I'd try and add Mango (my wife wants to try my beer but she only likes fruit beers). I did the same Pale Ale as before, with the hops reduced to 30g/30g and using a bag, and a secondary fermentation with an addition of 2kg of pulped mango flesh & juice on day 4 alongside the hops. The secondary fermentation seemed to go well but tasting at that point was disappointingly non-Mango so at bottling I added some concentrated natural mango essence I found online. I bottled that 2 weeks ago and tested a bottle last night after giving it enough time to carbonate, and it's... powerful. The Mango nose and sweetness is very strong but not completely overpowering, but as it is right now there's a weird transition where the initial flavour is quite bitter and then the strong mango comes in over the top of it and overpowers the bitterness and lingers a really long time. My first version of the Pale Ale didn't have that harsh initial bitterness so I'm hoping that's just because it's so green, and given a bit longer to condition, it'll fade and no longer result in that weird bitter-> sweet transition. Will try it again in 2 more weeks and I'm hopeful it will be better.
I then decided my last extract beer before I try switching to grain would be a wheat beer. We had a small heatwave due in the UK and I had no temperature control, but the Mangrove Jacks Wheat beer yeast (M20 I think it's called?) stated a range of 18-30C and I was sure I could keep it under 30 so I got it going... and it failed hard. Initial fermentation was insane, the Krausen was coming out the top of my airlock and the pressure inside got so high that on the first day of fermentation it popped the fermenter lid open 5 times. Then after just 2 days like that, it just stalled completely at about 1.024. Rousing up the sediment with some stirring got a brief amount of extra fermentation down to about 1.022 and then it stalled again. I pitched a second yeast packet, and nothing. After several days of it sitting at 1.022 and the wort tasting far too sweet (temp never went over 30C, was around 28C the whole time), I gave up and dumped it and started to build a fermentation fridge.
Fridge went really well, in part due to various threads on here, including one where a guy was using the EXACT same model Kenwood fridge that I bought and he had access to a Thermal Camera to work out where it was safe to drill and posted those thermal images here. (the drain hole isn't usable). SO useful. I might add some pics on here if I can be bothered to get them off my phone.
Fridge in place, I was ready to re-try the extract wheat beer, but I had been thinking about other variables that might have caused or contributed to the failure, and I realised that I'd also changed my water - I don't like our tap water, it's very hard and high in chlorine, so I'd been using cheap bottled spring water - but I'd bought from a different place for the failed ferment. I'd just discovered that water chemistry is a thing. I wasn't quite ready yet to go full on hard into water chemistry stuff but comparing the 2 I saw that the water I'd used in my successful brews had been 50ppm Calcium while the water in the failed one was only 7ppm Calcium, and google told me 50+ was important for the yeast. But ALL the guides on this are citing those values in the initial Mash, nothing about the wort, and as I'm using extracts at this point I'm very confused. I bought the 50ppm water and made my wort with the extract and LME, then measured the calcium... and it came out at 250ppm. I thought the test strips I bought must not be very good, they only have 5 graduations between 0 and 250 and jumps from 120 to 250, so I bought the salifert kit, once again thanks to info I gained lurking here on this forum, and re-tested it with the kit.... result 220ppm Ca. That meant the extract/LME I'm using is adding a HUGE amount of calcium, but I don't know if that's a problem, because like I said all the Ca info I can find online only talks about the levels in the mash water pre-mash, there's nothing about what the Ca level should be in the wort when using an extract, effectively post-mash. I decided not to worry about it and see what happens. That beer has been bubbling away all week at 22C in my new fridge which is working perfectly and so far is behaving exactly as expected. it's been just under 4 days since I added the yeast, fermentation has slowed but still generating pressure (plastic bucket so I can see the lid bulging) and occasional bubbles in the airlock, and I just tested the gravity at 1.020 (OG 1.050) - given the expected FG according to Mangrove Jacks for this is 1.016 and it's only 4 days in and still bubbling, I'm pretty sure everything is good.
So, yeah, that's me and where I am. I won't be brewing again for a while after I bottle this wheat beer as 2x 5 gallon brews will completely max me out on bottles and space to store them, and I won't brew again until I've freed up at least half of it, but I want to move on to grain now I've gained confidence in the basics. Space is still a problem so I'm thinking for my first grain batch I actually go partial grain - The Malt Miller here in the UK sell custom made 'mini mash' kits and I'm eying up this one: https://www.themaltmiller.co.uk/product/saison-mini-mash-kit/ or this one: https://www.themaltmiller.co.uk/product/cali-common-mini-mash-kit/ (I LOVE Anchor Steam, one of my goals at the start of this journey was to make my own Anchor Steam-a-like).
Would love feedback on the CA wort level stuff, any thoughts on the mini-mash kits as an intro towards using grain, or any thoughts on anything else I posted.
Apologies in advance, I tend to be overly verbose. A colleague years ago told me I never use 10 words when 1000 will do.
I've been lurking here for a month or 2 now, leeching a load of helpful information from existing threads. Thought it time I make an account.
I'm 51 and live in London, UK. Thought many times in my life that I wanted to do brewing, but I've always had very limited space, even now my wife and I share a small 1 bedroom flat (US: apartment) with a kitchen that for 2 people to use at the same time, they have to be VERY friendly with each other.... so I always put it off, but in Jan this year my wife was struggling to buy me a birthday present and I suggested a starter homebrew equipment bundle and an extract porter kit, and now here we are with my 4th brew currently fermenting happily away in my new Inkbird fermentation fridge I built last weekend in our store cupboard (with MANY thanks to threads on these boards I used for reference).
I've been a beer snob most of my adult life. I have a large preference for dark beers, preferring a richer darker malt flavour in what I drink. Porters/Stouts, Dunkels, Belgian ales, that sort of thing. The only style I actively dislike is IPA - Pale Ale I love but too much hops are a real turn-off for me. This has made the last decade frustrating when 80% of the supermarket shelf became IPAs. I'm also not a huge fan of the recent popularity of 'hazy' beers, preferring a cleaner mouth-feel.
My first brew, the porter kit was... well I can say it was successful. it successfully completed exactly as it should and the resulting beer was... fine. But honestly one of the most basic porters I've ever drunk, extremely plain with just a simple malt note and nothing interesting or complex about it. Don't get me wrong, I had made my own beer and that was exciting as all hell. I even convinced myself for a few weeks that it was 'good' beer until I was honest with myself that while I was happy I'd made a beer successfully it was very underwhelming.
Then I decided to go a tiny bit more adventurous, still stick to an extract for my second beer but make my own decisions on yeast and hops. The Pale Ale I made was a huge improvement over my first brew in terms of interesting flavour, but I did miscalculate on my hops and dry hopped 50g Goldings & 50g Citra with no hop bag and the result, while not quite being IPA levels of hops, was too hoppy for a Pale Ale. Other than that it was really really good though, I ended up hosting a party for friends, several of whom are or have been homebrewers and they drank me dry of all the Pale Ale in 1 evening, with one of the homebrewers (an all-grain guy) declaring that for my second beer and from an extract it was amazing and it had taken him 5-10 brews before he made anything that good.
The fact that Pale Ale was so good and popular, and that I'd just been drunk dry of it, made me want to repeat it, except with the hops turned down, but that seemed a bit too samey, after all I'm trying to learn and grow and making the exact same beer twice in a row wasn't ideal so I thought I'd try and add Mango (my wife wants to try my beer but she only likes fruit beers). I did the same Pale Ale as before, with the hops reduced to 30g/30g and using a bag, and a secondary fermentation with an addition of 2kg of pulped mango flesh & juice on day 4 alongside the hops. The secondary fermentation seemed to go well but tasting at that point was disappointingly non-Mango so at bottling I added some concentrated natural mango essence I found online. I bottled that 2 weeks ago and tested a bottle last night after giving it enough time to carbonate, and it's... powerful. The Mango nose and sweetness is very strong but not completely overpowering, but as it is right now there's a weird transition where the initial flavour is quite bitter and then the strong mango comes in over the top of it and overpowers the bitterness and lingers a really long time. My first version of the Pale Ale didn't have that harsh initial bitterness so I'm hoping that's just because it's so green, and given a bit longer to condition, it'll fade and no longer result in that weird bitter-> sweet transition. Will try it again in 2 more weeks and I'm hopeful it will be better.
I then decided my last extract beer before I try switching to grain would be a wheat beer. We had a small heatwave due in the UK and I had no temperature control, but the Mangrove Jacks Wheat beer yeast (M20 I think it's called?) stated a range of 18-30C and I was sure I could keep it under 30 so I got it going... and it failed hard. Initial fermentation was insane, the Krausen was coming out the top of my airlock and the pressure inside got so high that on the first day of fermentation it popped the fermenter lid open 5 times. Then after just 2 days like that, it just stalled completely at about 1.024. Rousing up the sediment with some stirring got a brief amount of extra fermentation down to about 1.022 and then it stalled again. I pitched a second yeast packet, and nothing. After several days of it sitting at 1.022 and the wort tasting far too sweet (temp never went over 30C, was around 28C the whole time), I gave up and dumped it and started to build a fermentation fridge.
Fridge went really well, in part due to various threads on here, including one where a guy was using the EXACT same model Kenwood fridge that I bought and he had access to a Thermal Camera to work out where it was safe to drill and posted those thermal images here. (the drain hole isn't usable). SO useful. I might add some pics on here if I can be bothered to get them off my phone.
Fridge in place, I was ready to re-try the extract wheat beer, but I had been thinking about other variables that might have caused or contributed to the failure, and I realised that I'd also changed my water - I don't like our tap water, it's very hard and high in chlorine, so I'd been using cheap bottled spring water - but I'd bought from a different place for the failed ferment. I'd just discovered that water chemistry is a thing. I wasn't quite ready yet to go full on hard into water chemistry stuff but comparing the 2 I saw that the water I'd used in my successful brews had been 50ppm Calcium while the water in the failed one was only 7ppm Calcium, and google told me 50+ was important for the yeast. But ALL the guides on this are citing those values in the initial Mash, nothing about the wort, and as I'm using extracts at this point I'm very confused. I bought the 50ppm water and made my wort with the extract and LME, then measured the calcium... and it came out at 250ppm. I thought the test strips I bought must not be very good, they only have 5 graduations between 0 and 250 and jumps from 120 to 250, so I bought the salifert kit, once again thanks to info I gained lurking here on this forum, and re-tested it with the kit.... result 220ppm Ca. That meant the extract/LME I'm using is adding a HUGE amount of calcium, but I don't know if that's a problem, because like I said all the Ca info I can find online only talks about the levels in the mash water pre-mash, there's nothing about what the Ca level should be in the wort when using an extract, effectively post-mash. I decided not to worry about it and see what happens. That beer has been bubbling away all week at 22C in my new fridge which is working perfectly and so far is behaving exactly as expected. it's been just under 4 days since I added the yeast, fermentation has slowed but still generating pressure (plastic bucket so I can see the lid bulging) and occasional bubbles in the airlock, and I just tested the gravity at 1.020 (OG 1.050) - given the expected FG according to Mangrove Jacks for this is 1.016 and it's only 4 days in and still bubbling, I'm pretty sure everything is good.
So, yeah, that's me and where I am. I won't be brewing again for a while after I bottle this wheat beer as 2x 5 gallon brews will completely max me out on bottles and space to store them, and I won't brew again until I've freed up at least half of it, but I want to move on to grain now I've gained confidence in the basics. Space is still a problem so I'm thinking for my first grain batch I actually go partial grain - The Malt Miller here in the UK sell custom made 'mini mash' kits and I'm eying up this one: https://www.themaltmiller.co.uk/product/saison-mini-mash-kit/ or this one: https://www.themaltmiller.co.uk/product/cali-common-mini-mash-kit/ (I LOVE Anchor Steam, one of my goals at the start of this journey was to make my own Anchor Steam-a-like).
Would love feedback on the CA wort level stuff, any thoughts on the mini-mash kits as an intro towards using grain, or any thoughts on anything else I posted.