I finally got a chance to make my first brew get going yesterday. I should have said "our" because it was made by my wife and a friend who has an interest in taking up in the hobby as well. I invited him over to share the experience. It was a nice fun full day, watching pot boil while sharing few bottles of Belgian Ales...
I used Brewer's Best IPA extract kit (includes two crushed grains and one bittering hop, one finishing hop). I used kitchen stow to boil full five gallons in a 7 gallons SS pot. I have tried first to check if my stove burner is hot enough to bring it full boil which it did. In order to chil, I used an immersion chiller which I homemade and a secondary coil to chil the water from tap in a cooler filled with ice. It was cooled from boiling down to 90F in less than 10 min but it took another 15 minutes to get down to 70F (no ice left in the cooler). Temp on the carboy went up to 74F during shaking on a tennis ball (?) according to the strip thermometer on carboy. Siphoned the wort into a 6.5g carboy instead of the bucket. I am glad did because it is so much fun to watch all the activity in the carboy. It started to be pretty active in few hours and in about 7-8 hours, there was over 140-150 bubles per minute and a hefty amount of foam on top. This morning, it was calmer and foam was somehow less but still there is a very healthy activity in the now appears to be "muddy" beer. Not sure at what stage it becomes "beer". Carboy is placed in a dark basement room where the temperature is steady at 67F. Carboy is still at 72F after 18 hours there.
Lessons learned:
- Make more ice or buy few bags before you start (just because I want to chil the wort as quickly as posssible).
- Collect filtered water before hand because my under sink filtration system has a capacity of 2 gallons (ended up racing to store to get some spring water)
- Don't forget to stir the worth at the end to accumulate the residue from hops in the center so siphoning would be more efficient at the end.
-Don't wait for making the next batch till I run out of what I made this time because stor ebought beer do not last long during the brew day when you have others to share your beer.
Hope you didn't mind me writing so much but saying nothing useful. Just pleased with the experince and wanted to share...

I used Brewer's Best IPA extract kit (includes two crushed grains and one bittering hop, one finishing hop). I used kitchen stow to boil full five gallons in a 7 gallons SS pot. I have tried first to check if my stove burner is hot enough to bring it full boil which it did. In order to chil, I used an immersion chiller which I homemade and a secondary coil to chil the water from tap in a cooler filled with ice. It was cooled from boiling down to 90F in less than 10 min but it took another 15 minutes to get down to 70F (no ice left in the cooler). Temp on the carboy went up to 74F during shaking on a tennis ball (?) according to the strip thermometer on carboy. Siphoned the wort into a 6.5g carboy instead of the bucket. I am glad did because it is so much fun to watch all the activity in the carboy. It started to be pretty active in few hours and in about 7-8 hours, there was over 140-150 bubles per minute and a hefty amount of foam on top. This morning, it was calmer and foam was somehow less but still there is a very healthy activity in the now appears to be "muddy" beer. Not sure at what stage it becomes "beer". Carboy is placed in a dark basement room where the temperature is steady at 67F. Carboy is still at 72F after 18 hours there.
Lessons learned:
- Make more ice or buy few bags before you start (just because I want to chil the wort as quickly as posssible).
- Collect filtered water before hand because my under sink filtration system has a capacity of 2 gallons (ended up racing to store to get some spring water)
- Don't forget to stir the worth at the end to accumulate the residue from hops in the center so siphoning would be more efficient at the end.
-Don't wait for making the next batch till I run out of what I made this time because stor ebought beer do not last long during the brew day when you have others to share your beer.
Hope you didn't mind me writing so much but saying nothing useful. Just pleased with the experince and wanted to share...



