I’m new to Home-brewing... I’ve been giving it more thought and consideration lately, but I want to be sure I don’t jump feet first into another “hobby” that I won’t keep up with!
I’m curious: on average, how much does it cost to brew your own batch (not the equipment, just the ingredients).
I’m thinking 2.5-5gallon batches to serve in my kegerator.
I’ve seen lots of kits online, they range in the $40-50 areas... is this typical?
I understand the concern. I'm new to home brew myself and every hobby I've ever had has gone over what I thought it would cost. However, I'm obsessive-compulsive about things and the more I learn the more money I seem to spend getting everything just so.
With that said you can get by relatively inexpensive cost wise but it requires a little legwork. I've found that hops can be had for around $1 per oz when purchased by the pound from a hop farm. I also found a local malter who will sell malt to me for less than $1 per pound but I have to purchase in 50lb. increments and I have to call a few days before I'm going to pick up so they can have my small purchase ready. I also have to mill the malt myself but it's pretty easy. I have a cheap auger type mill that looks more like a meat grinder than a mill. Hand cranking at a reasonable pace takes about 1 minute per pound of malt.
I've recycled yeast and it has worked. However, now I'm just making a big starter and keeping some back to grow for the next batch. IMO it's easier than harvesting from the prior brew. I can't remember who posted it but I read about it on this forum and it made a whole lot of sense to me.
If I was going to do a 2.5 gallon all grain batch it would cost under $5 for the grain, nothing for the yeast, and maybe $1 worth of hops. I'd also need a $.75 one time use grain bag.
Let's say it was $7.50 when factoring in the initial yeast cost over time and multiple batches. That's $3 per gallon for ingredients with the one time use grain bag.
Now, lets say you don't want to mill grain and can't find a local malter who is nice to homebrewers.
Milled grain is under $2 per pound from most of the internet places so let's say grain cost went up to $10 along with $2 for an oz of hops. Let's also say that you felt better about just using fresh yeast each time so yeast for 2.5 gallons would probably be $3.
Now it's up to $6 per gallon for ingredient costs. Still pretty low imo. Plus, you get to experiment and tinker with things while learning all about what affects what. That's my reason for doing this or any other hobby, learning and experimenting.