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Official first brew; Mr Beer West Coast Pale Ale

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Joe13

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OMG ITS NOT BEER YET?!?!?!?!?




Now that that's out of the way, I present to you a few brew time photos!

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Filtering away
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The Extract gooing up.

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RDWHACB (Relax, don't worry, have a commercial brew)
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In it's final resting place for the next two weeks.
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A couple things I have learned already:

Brita a ton of water beforehand so you don't have to wait while the pitcher refills.

Don't try to pour the brita while it is filtering (Watery stove)

Verify before that the spigot is tight and not leaking. (Went in while it was just water to re-tighten. that should be interesting.)

Make sure you have the tools for the job! (I need a actual metal spoon, stirring with a ladle sucks.)

Other then that, I had a blast and can't wait to see how bottling goes!
 
Been two days and I got some activity in the keg. Nothing crazy, but I'm trusting all is going well. Can't wait to drink it!
 
Congrats, from a former Maine-iac.

Just fired my first two batches today (partial mashes), now sitting down to write up my 'lessons learned', think that #1 will be 'Flaked Corn and Barley mash/runoff/etc = SUPER GLUE when dry'.
 
Would love to see the final pictures and also end of ferment and bottling pics.

Will do! I am going to leave it in the fermenter for 2 weeks. the package says 7-10 days, but I want to give it plenty of time.

Congrats, from a former Maine-iac.

Just fired my first two batches today (partial mashes), now sitting down to write up my 'lessons learned', think that #1 will be 'Flaked Corn and Barley mash/runoff/etc = SUPER GLUE when dry'.


Congrats! I have to agree, all the reading you do can't replace the hands-on learning. I got a ton and this is a freaking easy kit. :) My only concern is temp in the house since we have programmable thermostats and it goes down to 62 during the day. I might up that to keep the cold at bay. Hopefully the towels i wrapped around it keep any latent heat from fermentation in.
 
those pictures are basically the exact thing that happened in my kitchen 14 days ago to be exact. Tonight would have been bottling day.....but adult league hockey starts tonight and I'll be damned if i don't skate. I'm not worried one bit!

Joe13, if you weren't already aware...give it time.
 
those pictures are basically the exact thing that happened in my kitchen 14 days ago to be exact. Tonight would have been bottling day.....but adult league hockey starts tonight and I'll be damned if i don't skate. I'm not worried one bit!

Joe13, if you weren't already aware...give it time.


I'm giving it all the time it needs. I tech wont bottle it for 16 days, then it's gonna bottle condition in the kegerator for 2 weeks.
 
Yep, Mr. Beer with the West Coast Pale Ale, made with the Booster, was my first beer as well. It came out okay. I quickly replaced the Booster with a pound of DME on my next batch though.

How much ABV approximate did that yield?
 
From what i have read on the Mr beer site, and all extract brew will bring you into the 4.6-5.0% range. the booster ones are only about 3.7%. I got one more brew pack with booster I'm gonna start once i bottle and then after that I plan to move on to their recipes on thier site. I think I ideally want to get about 6 Mr. Beer brews under my belt before I move on to a bigger batch extract, partial mash situation.
 
This was my first brew too! Congratulations you made beer. Might not be your best, might not be your worst, but you made it. I usually give my beer 3 to 4 weeks before bottling. No need to rush it.
 
that's how it started for me about 1 year ago, a couple Mr. Beer batches I picked up from after christmas sale..now completely all-grain, temp controlled freezer for fermenting, beer fridge with mutiple taps. Welcome to the hobby!
 
Well, it's been two weeks officially! I have been checking on it everyday, and fermentation seems to have stopped. Smells nice. Plan is to bottle it this weekend, then bottle condition in the same spot it fermented for two to three weeks. can't wait!!

Up next on my brew schedule is a Whispering Wheat Weizenbier. I have picked up a thermometer, a metal spoon. and a new can opener. Probably will brew this when i get back from my business trip in Feb. That way it's fermenting while i get to enjoy my pale ales. :D
 
Bottling time!

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Tasted it and it tasted like warm, yeasty, flat beer. perfect.

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It's a very complicated process.:cross:

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This was the leftover that didn't fit into a bottle. I left it on the counter for a day and it cleared up nicely and the little yeast in it settled out. Also, delicious single-malt scotch from Scotland's smallest distillery.

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Bottled up and ready to carb and warm condition for two weeks.

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Looking good. I just bottled my first brew, also WCPA, over the weekend. Didn't drink scotch when I bottled though. Maybe next time!
 
I'm right there with you! Only a few days ahead. I bottled on Saturday. Couple notes I found:
1) The spigot on the keg sucks. After I was finished bottling, I replaced it with one that has a large on/off style lever and flows much more cleanly and smoothly. Total cost about 3 bucks.
2)A bottling wand helps prevent sloshing the brew around while bottling. Works very well. My factory spigot had a 1/2" inner diameter (if you're going to buy one), but others on this message board have claimed theirs is 3/8".
 
Good ol' Mr. Beer, West Coast PA was my first beer as well. Have fun with the hobby, the homebrew rabbit hole goes deep so be prepared for your addiction, find a beer your wife or sig other likes and keep a pipeline of that style around :)

Once in a while when shopping for ingredients I'll still grab up a Mr. Beer kit for the hell of it, I'd recommend their Oktoberfest - I enjoyed that one. May be seasonal but I'm sure somebody on Ebay or Amazon would still have a kit for sale.
 
My first brew is also the WCPA. It went in the bottle last Friday. I actually replaced the booster with light DME because my booster pack had a small hole in it. I found another Mr Beer kit less than a week later for 10 bucks and a refill kit for 5. I made a cold maple wheat beer from a recipe on the MrB website and have that brewing as well. I am in the process of pricing out a 2.5 gallon brewing setup.. and plan on ordering that this week, all before I have even tasted my first brew!
 
Looking good. I just bottled my first brew, also WCPA, over the weekend. Didn't drink scotch when I bottled though. Maybe next time!

I wasn't a scotch guy until i went to Scotland for my honeymoon. Now i have an appreciation for it.

I'm right there with you! Only a few days ahead. I bottled on Saturday. Couple notes I found:
1) The spigot on the keg sucks. After I was finished bottling, I replaced it with one that has a large on/off style lever and flows much more cleanly and smoothly. Total cost about 3 bucks.
2)A bottling wand helps prevent sloshing the brew around while bottling. Works very well. My factory spigot had a 1/2" inner diameter (if you're going to buy one), but others on this message board have claimed theirs is 3/8".

I actually bottled mine Sat as well, just didn't get a chance to upload the photos yet. mostly out of lazyness. I agree that the spigot sucks. pushing it kept sliding the keg back on the counter. As far as splashing, I didn't have too much of an issue. I kept the bottle tilted and let it run down the wall of the bottle to fill. I like the idea of a bottling wand though, might have to look into it.

Good ol' Mr. Beer, West Coast PA was my first beer as well. Have fun with the hobby, the homebrew rabbit hole goes deep so be prepared for your addiction, find a beer your wife or sig other likes and keep a pipeline of that style around :)

Once in a while when shopping for ingredients I'll still grab up a Mr. Beer kit for the hell of it, I'd recommend their Oktoberfest - I enjoyed that one. May be seasonal but I'm sure somebody on Ebay or Amazon would still have a kit for sale.

Wife despises beer. but she is ok with me having it, so thats all good. To keep her happy she has a Margaritaville and I keep Riesling chilled for when she wants wine. :drunk:

My first brew is also the WCPA. It went in the bottle last Friday. I actually replaced the booster with light DME because my booster pack had a small hole in it. I found another Mr Beer kit less than a week later for 10 bucks and a refill kit for 5. I made a cold maple wheat beer from a recipe on the MrB website and have that brewing as well. I am in the process of pricing out a 2.5 gallon brewing setup.. and plan on ordering that this week, all before I have even tasted my first brew!

Yea, I got a wheat with booster on deck that I plan to make in about a week or so. It'll be my last booster and then I plan to move to full Extract for two. Once those two come out ok, I am going to try two recipes from Mr. Beer. The last being the Novicaine.:ban:
 
During my college days and into the mid 90's I brewed a ton of beers. Even tried a Mr. Beer then. But, as I was doing all grain then I laughed at the product.
I've tried it again over the last year and man am I surprised. First, it's amazing just how much better extracts are made now. BIG, BIG difference to me. I've made some very good beers with that little kit without much time and space.
But, I don't use the booster and I also don't always use their kits. My local brew shop will put together a 2 1/2 gallon kit for me for any beer I ask for. Extract/grain brews in the Mr. Beer keg are easy and very, very good. In fact, me and my friends can't tell the difference between that and my all grain batches. And, I can make a 5 gallon batch, split it between 2 little brown kegs and tweak each one differently......dry hopping one. I especially like that you don't rack to a secondary.
But the bottom line is that you can't make good beer in any system in just 14-21 days. If you follow the 3 weeks fermenting, 2 weeks carbonating and 3-4 weeks conditioning, you will be very pleased with what you can make. I have been.
 
For me, it's a cost and time issue. I'd love to start doing higher quality extract kits, but my LBS charges $40 and up for basic 5gal kits that still require you to purchase more ingredients/sanitizer when i can get MB kits for $10. Plus, I don't always have time for full 60 minute boils. The wife loves the fact that I can do my thing and be out of her kitchen in an hour total, so the MB kits are just right for me. SWMBO approved, unlike my other hobbies! Love it.
 
Same for my first batch. I was on the fence about getting the kit until I found it on clearance somewhere. The beer turned out ok. Nothing spectacular. I tried their pilothouse pilsner next and it was much better, but nothing that blew me away. Instead of sugar I bought carbonation tablets from Northern Brewer. Much easier than measuring and scooping sugar. Also bought a nice bottle capper and a case of brown long necks. Planning on a can of their seasonal Hefe from last summer in the next few weeks. My wife and I had our second son in August, so no time to brew since then.
I've heard lots of complaining about Mr Beer kits, but I think they make a great first couple of batches in order to get your feet wet! Eventually I want to expand and get a deluxe kit from Northern Brewer, but the smaller batches and simple process really help build a little confidence.
 
I too started with a Mr Beer I recieved as a gift from SWMBO for Christmas. I made the WCPA right away and it has been conditioning for about 20 days now. My "surveilance beer" that I tried after 10 days in the bottles wasn't bad, but not great. I have a Whispering Wheat in bottles now too that I added a lb of wheat DME to and subbed Mr B yeast for Danstar Munich (wheat beer yeast) to give it a more traditional flavor. Initial sampling at bottling time was very tasty! I am hooked and going to move to larger batches soon.
 
Just tasted a Mr Beer WCPA that I pitched back in December. I wasn't expecting much, but go a suprisingly good beer. Time and patience help a lot. Got a Bewitched Red Ale I bottled last night, and a St Patricks Stout and OctoberFest Lager with golden amber that went intoMr. Beer kegs last night. Seems like the premium kits without the booster give you a lot better beer.

Mr Beer is super easy, and takes up very little space. Helluva lot of fun, and I've learned a lot doing it.

Gotta give it time though...
 
Didn't drink scotch when I bottled though. Maybe next time!
I wasn't a scotch guy until i went to Scotland for my honeymoon. Now i have an appreciation for it.

I find that scotch is my friend when doing a plethora of chores/hobbies:
a) Drywalling
b) Painting/Priming
c) Brewing/Bottling
d) Drinking
e) Spending Time with the In-Law :mug:

find a beer your wife or sig other likes and keep a pipeline of that style around :)
Wife despises beer. but she is ok with me having it, so thats all good. To keep her happy she has a Margaritaville and I keep Riesling chilled for when she wants wine. :drunk:


Haha! She doesn't partake in the grain-y pleasures... This is why Beer Tuesday works so well :tank:
 
Penguinetti said:
I find that scotch is my friend when doing a plethora of chores/hobbies:
a) Drywalling
b) Painting/Priming
c) Brewing/Bottling
d) Drinking
e) Spending Time with the In-Law :mug:

Okay, I've definitely had scotch while painting my living room and that's something I'll never do again. "YUP, GOOD ENOUGH!" Just don't look at it the next day. Or ever.
 
My wife on the other hand loves beer, wheat to be exact - She's pregnant right now but normally I keep a solid pipeline of either Blood Orange Hefeweizen or a Bavarian Wheat of some sort around.

Speaking of the BO Hefe, your first batch excitement aside, I'm not sure how you guys are feeling after brewing up the West Coast PA as far as the "challenge" of the hobby goes, and not to knock Mr. Beer because it's a great introduction to the hobby and their quality kits do make some tasty brewskis, but I was left kind of scratching my head thinking "this is too easy, there has to be more"...

The Blood Orange Hefe is a great introduction beer into extract brewing and stepping up to a 5 gallon batch, plus it's just fun! You get to zest, dice, steep, and include actual fruit in your fermentation. It has a simple hop schedule, it's extract, also doesn't require a full boil - you can scale the boil down and just add top off water to your fermentation bucket. Drinkable extremely fast as well, if anybody here off their first batch of WCPA is looking for a good / simple beer to try a 5gal extract batch with, I'd highly recommend it.
 

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