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THIS is why you can't have too many cornies...

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BierMuncher

...My Junk is Ugly...
HBT Supporter
Joined
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Location
St. Louis, MO
This is what happens when you spend more time serving your beer at parties than actually brewing.

Six weeks ago, these guys were all filled. Three major parties and some normal consumption later...I have work to do.

No worries though...I still have 9 other (partially) filled kegs still in service and 6 fermenters chugging away. :D

Empty_Cornies.jpg
 
20 cornies - Check
4 fermenters - Check

Enough time to brew as often as I'd like during hours while I am still concious - Fail
 
I know what you mean brother...I'm glad this is just a hobby and not a REAL job!!!

Current inventory goes something like this:

23 cornies...18 full (2 on tap, 7 in the keezer, the rest waiting in line)...check...

23 cases of German 1/2 liters...4 full...check...

100+ wine bottles...about 80 full of meads and assorted Apfelweins...check...

22 carboys...3 full...check...

5 primary buckets...3 full, check...
 
i know what you mean, man. i always think i have a TON of beer lying around, then i tap a few of them and invite some friends over and next thing i know...I'm out of prepared beer! crazy how fast they go, especially the light beers.
 
I'm still trying to get the pipeline full. I hate waiting on beer to get ready. At least I'm stocking up on more bottles while I want for my latest batch to get ready. Got 2 cases of 12 oz bottles full, 2 party pigs, 2 mini kegs and a case of 22 oz bottles. Also have 3 carboys full. Got the ingredients to make another batch in the next day or 2. Hopefully soon I wont have to wait on beer anymore.
 
I'm jealous. I still haven't saved up the dough to buy my other 12 cornies I want. The 10 I have right now just aren't cutting it. It feels like I'm always waiting for a keg to kick so I can wash it, sanitize it, and fill it. :/
 
I have no cornies:(

That changes tomorrow:D

I have no beers in progress:(

Because I'm neck deep in full bottles of my best beers ever and waiting for my in-process keezer project to finish before brewing again:D
 
While I bow to y'alls superior breweries, it makes me reflect on this one simple truty. "My biggest brewing problem is lack of cash flow!" I owe $11,000 to the hospital and another $5,000 to doctors, CT scan, and other little ticky tack on bills related to SWMBO's surgery! Come on you gotta be kidding me, they charged $84 for a pregnancy test! Lunatics!!! It's enough to drive a conservative independent toward supporting state sponsored health care.... well maybe it's not pushing me that far... YET! I told SWMBO it'd be cheaper to have her buried.... well not by much these days! Anyway I've got to wait 2 weeks to order $25 bucks worth of stuff for my next batch! Thanks for letting me vent...

Schlante,
Phillip
 
This begs 2 questions BM:

1. How often do you brew? Any on weekdays/nights?
2. How long start to finish for a 10gal batch?
 
BM - I'm not quite up to your level, I have an apartment and am limited on my space.
In two weekends I have blown through 4 kegs going to parties where "no one" would be drinking homebrew. Last Saturday I went to a wedding, full bar with two "HOT" bar tenders. I set up my homebrew on the other side of the lawn and my IPA and the cider floated so quick I was shocked. Well time to start up the brewing machine again.
 
...WHAT THE HELL DO YOU DO FOR A LIVING TO AFFORD ALL THAT COOL SHTUFF AN STILL HAVE TIME TO BREW?

Don't kid yourself.

Three kids in college means I'm pinching pennies...packing my lunch to work and harvesting dry yeast to stretch it out.

I just like to pick up a bucket or carboy, or a couple cornies here and there as I can.

My normal (weekly) routine is to:
  • Finalize my recipe during lunch on Wednesday.
  • Crush my grains on Wednesday night and set up the gear.
  • Start brewing on Thursday night the minute I step in the door.
Depending on the recipe it's between 4 hours and 5 1/2 hours.

This leaves my weekends free to help the SWMBO out around the house and do my fatherly duties...as well as transfer beers, clean kegs, rinse bottles, sample my dry hopping fermenters...etc...
 
I just wish I had the money to keep, well, the bucket and carboy I have now going. Been wanting to start another batch for months and haven't been able to scrape together the $40 for ingredients, let alone buy any new equipment. Only thing I've been able to keep on tap is soda and apfelwein. Soda is all of about $7 to fill a keg, and the apfelwein runs a hair over $20 as long as I keep a batch going constantly so I don't have to buy more yeast.

Should get better now... Finances will be straightened out in the next couple of weeks and my new job is going well. Hopefully be able to pick up some side work here and there to finance some new equipment. SWMBO is still complaining about what I spent for the little bit of kegging equipment I didn't get for free back at the beginning of the year.
 
Don't kid yourself.

Three kids in college means I'm pinching pennies...packing my lunch to work and harvesting dry yeast to stretch it out.

I just like to pick up a bucket or carboy, or a couple cornies here and there as I can.

My normal (weekly) routine is to:
  • Finalize my recipe during lunch on Wednesday.
  • Crush my grains on Wednesday night and set up the gear.
  • Start brewing on Thursday night the minute I step in the door.
Depending on the recipe it's between 4 hours and 5 1/2 hours.

This leaves my weekends free to help the SWMBO out around the house and do my fatherly duties...as well as transfer beers, clean kegs, rinse bottles, sample my dry hopping fermenters...etc...

Very good point BM.
If you spread your upgrades out over a few years even a sweet setup is not that expensive. Especially compared to some other hobbies.
And at about 5 hours per brew it takes less time than an average game of golf.
I'm only 18months into my brewing career so I've got a long way to go but I have my realistic plans and my dreams :D

Craig
 
Three kids in college means I'm pinching pennies...packing my lunch to work and harvesting dry yeast to stretch it out.

And yet you still can "pump out" all sorts of world-class recipes that brewers across the land are dying to replicate. +1 to ya, man. I hold lots of respect for ya!
 

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