just placed a order for a bunch of equipment to do all grain but after reading the forms a little more I'm getting really scared. I only like neipa style beers and am nervous about the water aspect of brewing. Any suggestions on water? My home water tastes like chlorine from faucet but is great tasting from my refrigerator with filter. Would my fridge water with Camden tablet be ok to use? I know nothing about water chemistry so going with to to water and building it up right now is out of the question.
Number one thing: brewing should be fun. If you're "scared" then you're not doing it right. Treat this as a journey where the learning will be enjoyable, and result in nectar of the gods.
Yeah, water can be a little intimidating, but less so than you think. Heck, if you told me your grain bill, amount of water you planned on using, I'd tell you the things to add to the water. Then go back and figure out, after the brew, why they were what they were.
Any number of brewers here can do that for you to start.
Here's a short version: I am ready to brew a hazy ipa (not quite NEIPA, just a simple little thing). If I use 8 gallons of RO water my water additions would be 5 grams of calcium chloride, 5 grams of Epsom Salts, 1.5 grams of Gypsum, 3 ml of Lactic Acid.
Yours would be different but probably not hugely so.
You can get that stuff from Ritebrew:
http://www.ritebrew.com/category-s/1817.htm all that costs less than $10. All you need is a gram scale and a pipette or eyedropper to measure the lactic acid.
Water was the hardest thing for me to figure out, but with the spreadsheet calculators it's not bad. You put in your grain bill, source of water, then salts and additions to get the mineral balance where you like it, plus the pH about where it needs to be.
I agree with
@kh54s10 in that starting simpler would be better. In fact, if you have never brewed before at all, I would suggest brewing a couple extract kits first to get familiar with the process of the boil forward. Brewing isn't rocket science, but there are many moving parts, and the more you have to manage at the beginning, the harder it is to get them all to work correctly.
Remember: it's supposed to be fun. Make it so!