StateRoad84
Active Member
Just opened the Saison au Miel after only five days after bottling and it tasted fantastic!
I understand the desire to limit gear, be able to do it in the kitchen, etc., but 1 gallon of home brew hardly seems worth the effort. I've been doing 5 gallon batches from the very beginning and I go through so damn much beer (a 5 gallon keg a month) between myself, my sons and my friends) that I'm considering bouncing up to 10 gallon batches.
another new brewer with an unhealthy relationship with sanitation. If anyone ever told me to sanitize my scissors I would immediately stab them directly in the eyeball. Be reasonably clean and it will all work out.
I get that side of it too, but I absolutely love brewing small batches. I have all the gear to do up to 5 but I very rarely brew anything over 2.5 gallons. 2 Main reasons
1. Is I just don't need that much beer. I really don't want 50 of the same beer. But that's just my situation. I don't drink a ton and I don't have a bunch of people around readily to share it with. 10 bottles will last me a month.
2. Easiness and variety. Variety is way more important to me than quantity. Even commercial stuff I rarely buy the same beer more than once or twice. I'd rather try something new. Doing 1 gal all grain batches I can keep everything in my kitchen , easily brew on weeknights, do multiple brew days in an afternoon, and could even run multiple mashes simultaneously on my stove top. Small batch starts to get pretty cheap too when a 1oz bag of hops lasts multiple batches, and you're only using half a yeast pack, even less if you reuse.
I dunno, sorry didn't mean to sound preachy. Great thing about the brewing hobby is it's certainly scalable and everyone can get into in by whatever means they find best.
My last AG batch I only pitched 2.5 grams out of an 11.5 gram packet of US-05. The kits suggest pitching half the packet, I still contend that is over-pitching. I went by a pitch calculator, it took longer to get going but was the most active ferm I have witnessed so far.
So you'll be stabbing the good folks at white labs if you ever run into them, I assume.![]()
The dirtiest surface in your house is probably your cell phone, should we boil them before checking our brew timers?
I understand the desire to limit gear, be able to do it in the kitchen, etc., but 1 gallon of home brew hardly seems worth the effort. I've been doing 5 gallon batches from the very beginning and I go through so damn much beer (a 5 gallon keg a month) between myself, my sons and my friends) that I'm considering bouncing up to 10 gallon batches.