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Resurgence in homebrewing due to current events?

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I'm sure prices may have increased slightly for both shelf beer and HB ingredients. I just spent $20.55 on ingredients for 2.5 gallons of Caramel Amber, milled and shipped (recipe on HBT). I had some hops that I needed, but my total would still have been under $23. My local grocer (best beer prices around) charges $8-$13 for most craft 6'ers and a 24 of Bud is $22. So for the same cost I can have a case of a steller Amber ale or Bud. Hmm, tough choice.

Sure a hefty IPA might cost more to brew because of the hops, but a 6'er of something like that would probably run 11-13. I can't imagine designing a homebrew that would cost me $44-$52 for 2.5 gallons. So in terms of direct costs I'm doing great brewing my own and having a great time. And since I am now doing simple stove top BIAB using basically the same stuff I used for extract, my equipment costs have been pretty small.

To the question: will more people get into brewing? Not sure. It's not a difficult hobby, but it does take a commitment and many people would rather just plunk down the $'s for someone else to make that effort. Crafts of any kind never seem to be massively popular until there is an economic/societal issue that makes it worth the effort. Lots of people learned to brew during prohibition, people learned to sew and garden during the depression.... It's kind of like the car repair industry in Cuba, people down there have learned to do amazing repairs with a blow torch because getting parts is near impossible.

When getting good beer becomes more expensive and more difficult, more people may take up brewing their own. Hope so, the more the merrier, literally.
 
An example I have to share. A “Pack” is 24 cans. Others shown in this pic are 4pack, 16oz cans. Shipping is $15 flat rate until you spend $200 on an order. Local pickup available, same price so there isn’t a markup for shipped orders.

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It'll be more difficult for neophytes to dive into the hobby now than five years ago. The explosion in local breweries removed a lot of the need to brew at home and COVID lockdowns pretty much killed off most of the local mom-and-pop brew shops.
 
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Well, there is the online stores which will send anything a new brewer needs, or at least when I was a new brewer.
After a quick check I could get everything I want for many basic beers, ferment equipment etc.

sure, it costs more, but what don’t. War ,weather, politics and other events will always have some effect on our lives.
 
@Softailrider - What? I can't even think of a way the ingredients add up that high. A ton of DME?

Oh, are you including packaging bottle/can costs?
I only purchased a couple of lbs of DME for my yeast starters. Total of 40 lbs of grains, some hops, belgian candi syrup, and a couple of spices and the checkout was $190.00. Free shipping with purchases over $50.00, so no issue there and no bottling/canning supplies. I keg everything.
 
I only purchased a couple of lbs of DME for my yeast starters. Total of 40 lbs of grains, some hops, belgian candi syrup, and a couple of spices and the checkout was $190.00. Free shipping with purchases over $50.00, so no issue there and no bottling/canning supplies. I keg everything.

Was it more than $2/lb for grain? That's shockingly high!
 
Yeah I noticed commercial beer is getting stupidly expensive. The famous ones who aren’t up to $12 six packs are just casually removing two beers and selling $9.99 four packs. I’m getting really tired of our post-covid economy where everything is expensive, nothing goes on sale, and everything is sold out and being scalped (not beer yet thankfully). I don’t fully believe it either. I roll my eyes when a business openly uses our 8% inflation as an excuse when raising prices 50%. Like someone already mentioned, I think businesses are pumping their margin because it’ll blend in with the rest of them.

Makes it easier to justify brewing every weekend. I might even save money if I wasn’t adding $100 in equipment every time I step into the LHBS.
 
I’d always had the idea from my earliest days of brewing to try to brew what I can’t easily buy. There’s no Timothy Taylor Landlord for sale near me. Nor many other British beers.

I never wanted to compete with AB or any other brewery to brew what they brew and try to make it for less. I can’t and I can’t.

That said it does pay to brew the higher gravity stuff yourself if that is what you like to drink. You can brew 5 gallons of barleywine for probably less than the cost of a case of Bigfoot, etc. Or trying to make something similar to the beers Founders sells in 4 packs. And I’m not even going to talk about the price of one bottle of Bourbon County.
Off subject but do you a have a good clone for Timothy Taylor's as it's my brother in law's favourite beer and I want to make it for his bday. I use dry yeast what the best dry yeast for the job? Nottingham?
 
casually removing two beers and selling $9.99 four packs

Grrr, I just noticed this the other day. Stopped in to pick up an IPA 6 pk as I was out at home, pulled one off the shelf and there was only 4 12oz cans! Put it back and grabbed a local brew that hasn't yet upped their price.

Wow 2.50 per can. Pretty easy to beat that cost making my own... even with some additional equipment... wink wink nudge nudge
 
Grrr, I just noticed this the other day. Stopped in to pick up an IPA 6 pk as I was out at home, pulled one off the shelf and there was only 4 12oz cans! Put it back and grabbed a local brew that hasn't yet upped their price.

Wow 2.50 per can. Pretty easy to beat that cost making my own... even with some additional equipment... wink wink nudge nudge

They call that shrinkflation. Might affect you in ways you won't notice.... yikes.

Charmin's ultra soft toilet paper 18-count mega package now contains 244 two-ply sheets, down from a previous 264 double-ply sheets per roll. And super mega rolls of the brand now display 366 sheets versus a previous 396 sheets per roll.
https://www.cnn.com/2022/03/08/business/toilet-paper-roll-shrinking-inflation/index.html
 
Was it more than $2/lb for grain? That's shockingly high!
Between the 4 varieties I purchased, the average price was $2.65/lb. I brewed this same recipe 2 years ago and it was half the price then. FWIW, the ingredients came from MoreBeer. I priced compared the recipe with three other vendors and MoreBeer was the best deal. I would buy in bulk, but lack the ability to store grains in my house, so am forced to buy for each individual recipe.
 
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