PS I do All Grain and keg, I do AG because I feel more involved in the process than I do when I make extract. I keg because I'm way too lazy to bottle .
I was hanging out with some friends last night and brought along my IPA. It was very well received, and I was stoked. Then my friend Jack gave some to this other guy he knows that homebrews. He tried it and shrugged and said "is this extract?" I said yeah, and I'd welcome feedback. His response? "I'll give you feedback when you make a real beer."
Wow. Everyone else was shocked by his reaction. I mean, it's not like I opened a package labeled "beer", mixed it with water, and bottled it. I chose the amounts, specialty grains, hops and hop schedule, yeast, etc. Sheesh. I know it's not a contest, but I did feel better later when Jack told me it was better than any of the beers he has tried from the other guy.
Yeah, the world is full of Richards,,,and not meaning "given names," here...everyone's taste is different, dismiss his opinion if yer stuff tastes good to you and yoursAnd just remember, as you go through life, you find out that some people are just Dicks.
6-8 hours seems ridiculous, even if you have tons of equipment to haul around.
Yes, that guy is an ****** for sure.
My all grain brew day is an average of 6 hours, from hauling equipment from the basement to the front porch till clean up. I've been done as quickly as 5.5 hours, and as long as 7 or so when farting around too much during clean up.
Heat strike water - 15-30 minutes, depending on recipe
60-90 minute mash
5-10 minutes to vorlauf/drain tun
batch sparge 1 - stir, 10 minute hold + vorlauf and drain - 20 minutes
batch sparge 2 - repeat
15-20 minutes to reach boil
60 minute boil
(optional, per recipe) 20 minute hopstand
chill, 10-20 minutes, depending on ground water temp
20 minutes to settle
transfer, aerate, pitch yeast and into ferm chamber - about 15 minutes
clean up about 30 minutes or so
If the douch... I mean "gentleman" ... was merely asking out of the blue, then he's a pretentious ******. But if he picked up a flavour cue that suggested it was an extract brew, then perhaps there is some minor flaw in this beer, and this one might not be one of those much ballyhooed extract beers capable of winning NHC.
"is this extract?" I said yeah, and I'd welcome feedback. His response? "I'll give you feedback when you make a real beer."
He was clearly an ****** in either case
A little too much time for me at this point![]()
I think we've given the OP enough back-patting and "there there"'s to get him through. Is it OK if we now dig into his process a little bit and make sure he's making the best beer possible?
What was the recipe? How was the extract added to the boil (i.e., all at once at the beginning, all at once at the end, some early, some late, etc.)? What were the O.G. and F.G. measurements? What degree of attenuation did you achieve? Did it perhaps finish sweet? What steeping grains were used, if any? What was the fermentation temperature?
We've wasted enough keystrokes on the troll. Now let's help the OP improve, if indeed his beer contained a bit of "extract twang."
Extract - this one was all added at the beginning of the boil. Learned on here to add more of it later to avoid darker beer
It not only darkens the beer, but it caramelizes wort sugars, rendering them unfermentable. Many folks believe this is the source of the ill-defined "extract twang" that plagues many extract brews to varying degrees. This is why it's recommended to only add half the extract at the start of the boil (to give the hop oils something to cling to and retain some degree of hop utilization), and the rest at the very end (to minimize caramelization and creation of unfermentable sugars from otherwise fermentable extract).
Anyway, I've never heard of just boiling half at the beginning and adding the rest at the end. Does this mean to stop the boil at the end and add it?
Perhaps this is why some stop at 1.020?
Short version - color and clarity could be better, could use a bit more bitterness. I think my water is not helping me. The water in Ann Arbor is wacky - with a 61 ppm Sodium, 37 ppm Sulfate, and 95 ppm Chloride, it ends up being "Very Malty" according to Bru'n Water.