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Should I buy Beersmith?

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Check out the comparisons in the software section. I have Beersmith and have just begun to learn how to use it.
 
YES! It's got to be one of the best brew related purchases you can make.

It's not only utilitarian but entertaining as well.
 
It keeps you organized and helps you come up with recipes. I say it's worth it. I like buying the kits from the store and putting them in so I know what I remember what I like and don't like. Wondering if that .5lb 40L crystal malt you have left over is dark enough for your nut brown ale? Throw it into beersmith and find out.

The brewsheets are cool too. Well organized if you're doing multiple hop additions or even a late extract add.
 
It keeps you organized and helps you come up with recipes. I say it's worth it. I like buying the kits from the store and putting them in so I know what I remember what I like and don't like. Wondering if that .5lb 40L crystal malt you have left over is dark enough for your nut brown ale? Throw it into beersmith and find out.

The brewsheets are cool too. Well organized if you're doing multiple hop additions or even a late extract add.

:off: Do you have a recipe for that nuclear porter you could share?
 
IMO, If you are doing extract then no you dont need it.

If you're doing PM or All Grain then yes it is a valuable tool.
 
IMO, If you are doing extract then no you dont need it.

If you're doing PM or All Grain then yes it is a valuable tool.

I loved it when I was doing extract.
-You could enter an AG recipe in there then covert it and play around to get it to be the same.
-If you go to get your hops for a recipe and needed to subsitute you can enter that in and figure out exactly when and how much to enter of the new stuff.
-I love the inventory feature too.
 
I guess I am wrong then. I was just going by my experience, I would buy extract kits and brew them according to their recipe.
 
I guess I am wrong then. I was just going by my experience, I would buy extract kits and brew them according to their recipe.

You are not wrong just have a different opinion.:mug: But there are always questions about juicing the ABV and what steeping grains should be used.
 
Will BeerSmith work with Ginger Ales, Sodas, Root Beers, etc?

What about revisions? How are existing users treated when improvements are added...bugs fixed...new features created?

Is this a download only, or is a disk available?

And...is it Linux friendly? If so, which builds are supported?

Sorry about all of the questions, but no one seems to be asking any!

Pogo
 
Will BeerSmith work with Ginger Ales, Sodas, Root Beers, etc?

What about revisions? How are existing users treated when improvements are added...bugs fixed...new features created?

Is this a download only, or is a disk available?

And...is it Linux friendly? If so, which builds are supported?

Sorry about all of the questions, but no one seems to be asking any!

Pogo


There are alot of revisions coming out that are all free. They also have a forum for any questions or anything. The creator also spends some time on here as well. I think there is a disk available but im not sure. Their website will have all that info.
 
IMO, If you are doing extract then no you dont need it.

If you're doing PM or All Grain then yes it is a valuable tool.

Several others have disagreed, but I will go ahead and explain why I have BeerSmith even though I'm an extract brewer (a few weeks from my first PM, though).

It allows you to play with AG recipes and convert them to extract. You can tinker with late extract additions to keep the IBUs where you want them. It stores your recipes where you can find them.

Well worth the $$ IMO
 
I've found BeerSmith to be handy, like the inventory feature, have used it as an extract brewer to make substitutions, and actually think the calendar feature is great. Sure, I could have just written on a calendar, but since I'm already in the program it's just sort of a value-added feature. I expect that when I decide to make the switch to AG it will be even more useful.

With all of that in mind, I purchased a copy. Besides - look at it this way. Here's a program that someone clearly put a lot of time in, keeps updated with a lot of information, and can make your life a lot easier. It's been written for a specialty market not really a program you're going to mass-produce and get rich off of. Isn't it worth throwing the author a couple of bones for his time and effort?
 
There are a couple that you can download as shareware and experiment with before you buy. I went through a number of them before I settled on Promash a few years ago. Beer smith appears to be the most popular on this forum.
 
:off:Not to jack your thread but I will anyway, is there a good tutorial for Beersmith. I have been looking, even printed the pdf instructions(they blow), or is it all learn as you go?
 
I've found it extremely useful and well worth the money. However, there are other great software tools out there as well so it doesn't hurt to look around and see what suits you best.
 
Can you use it on multiple computers (that I own?)

I use my work computer for everything (ever since my personal computer became unstable) and my work computer gets re-imaged every 6 months and replaced ever other year. Now I don't want to pay for the software and then have it go away.

I need to get my personal computer up and running but being unstable I dont trust anything on it.
 
Best 20 bucks I ever spent. I use Beer Smith for every batch I brew. I would have a very tough time brewing with out it.

You have to make sure you set it up right for your equipment. If you dont, then your beer wont come out right. I found that out the hard way.
 
Can you use it on multiple computers (that I own?)

I use my work computer for everything (ever since my personal computer became unstable) and my work computer gets re-imaged every 6 months and replaced ever other year. Now I don't want to pay for the software and then have it go away.

I need to get my personal computer up and running but being unstable I dont trust anything on it.

Yes. The cool thing is that you can run it from a USB drive, too. It's very handy for taking with you to group brew days. :D
 
Okay, so does BeerSmith offer a CONSTANT rate for boil off, or is it the stupid % rate only? I have the trial version, and I dont like what I see. Since when is boil off a percentage???
 
I am also trying to play with the 2 step mashing application in BeerSmiths trial version and it is not working. It kees saying to add 0.00 gallons at 150F... well 150F is my TARGET temp... and 0.00 gallons?

Is the trial version just a hunk of junk?

I cant get it to do a multiple infusion mash....

Also, when I go to mash details it tells me that on this particular recipe that my "tun volume required" is 1.75 gallons... which is EXACTLY what my strike water volume is... um, what about the grain?
 
Absolutely. The best $20 you'll ever spend for brewing.

QFT

Is this a download only, or is a disk available?

And...is it Linux friendly? If so, which builds are supported?

I don't know on the disk question. I figure a download's better than a disk anyhow. I hear it runs fine under WINE, but I generally run it on my Wintel laptop, and rdesktop into the laptop from my workstation.

Okay, so does BeerSmith offer a CONSTANT rate for boil off, or is it the stupid % rate only? I have the trial version, and I dont like what I see. Since when is boil off a percentage???

No. This is my only quibble. Boiloff as a rate only works if you never vary the batch size. This is my #1 "I wish for" item in the next release.
 
I love it. I think it's an easy purchase for anyone serious about brewing. To be honest I don't know about any of the other applications though. I can't imagine that there is anything more to offer than this program. :mug:
 
But what about my above post concerning step mashing?

What about the tun volume required equaling the water volume only, not water + grain?

Is this really how it works?? I was looking at buying it, but I tried to create one recipe with the thing and I cant get a step mash out of it, the boil rate is a %... which is not realistic and the tun volume required is totally wrong...
 
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