I know who you are talking about. Their chicago location is much better for the brew info.
Not if you are talking about Brew and Grow..
those guys are arrogant pot heads that know absolutely nothing about brewing. They are complete jerks and offer terrible service. I have gotten terrible advice.. and they have flat out refused to help me with recipes, etc.
Bev Art on 95th and Western is great though.. those guys really know what they are talking about and are very helpful
When I was shopping for the SWMBO's wed ring, I received this advice from the guy I eventually bought from. It's the best test to see if (1) Someone knows what they're talking about and (2) if they're trying to screw you.
Yeah, I've since tried several homebrewed and commercial smoked porters, and have yet to try one that I could finish. In retrospect, I am almost certain that this was an old kit that they probably were more than happy to unload on the unsuspecting kid I was at the time.
This is actually excellent advice for certain styles of beer.Just pour the yeast (whitelabs vial) into the fermenter and you're good to go!
This is actually excellent advice for certain styles of beer.
My understanding is that a variety of styles (saisons, certain wheat beers) that have estery or phenolic flavors and aromas benefit from underpitching yeast.
My first visit to my old LHBS was simply fantastic. Starting shooting the breeze about brewing, and that I was thinking about starting. Asked what would be best to start with Ale Pales, Better Bottles, or Carboys. His suggestion? Start with the cheapest equipment that will work - and invest in a good set of ingredients. If you don't like homebrewing, you won't have invested a lot of cash, if you're on the fence - a good set of ingredients might push you over, and you can always upgrade to better equipment later. He didn't have the boxed "kit" available, so he grabbed all the equipment that was in the kit, and threw in a copy of "How to Brew".
When I went back to figure out how to start kegging, he talked me through how to build a jockey box, how much beer line to get (8 feet), and even helped me figure out what temp to carb at if it wasn't going to be in a kegerator yet...
Since we moved, I've stopped by the LHBS here and I haven't been impressed. I now view Brewmasters Warehouse and Williams Brewing as my LHBS.
Exactly... It wasn't until my 3rd or 4th visit that I realized he was a classmate from high school! I only wish the one closest to me in VA Beach was better. When the owners are there - no problems, when they're not...Sounds like you experience was like mine, finding a "winner" lhbs right off the bat.
Not if you are talking about Brew and Grow..
those guys are arrogant pot heads that know absolutely nothing about brewing. They are complete jerks and offer terrible service. I have gotten terrible advice.. and they have flat out refused to help me with recipes, etc.
Bev Art on 95th and Western is great though.. those guys really know what they are talking about and are very helpful
Tomatoes...right.
Can employees of LHBSes share idiotic things customers say to them? Because I got a real gem today - a guy wanted to make what I eventually determined was his conception of an imperial porter. He then said, "well, I really want to make something like Dark Lord from Three Floyd's..do you have a recipe for that?"
After I looked up a clone recipe and started going through what would be required, he realized it'd cost more than $50, because, ya know, there's like 12 lbs of fermentables for an extract batch, etc. Then, he revealed that he wanted it to be ready by Christmas! I didn't have the patience to explain why that was impossible, and directed him to a Bavarian Hefeweizen.
Some customers are pretty clueless.
Southern, I hear you - it would have been nice to have taken the time to explain why it wouldn't be ready by Xmas. On the other hand, with an entire thread dedicated to pointing out idiotic things said by lhbs employees, I think it's fine to allow one to vent about a customer - we don't need to berate them for it. Just my two cents.