• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Very First Brew Day

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

StateRoad84

Active Member
Joined
Mar 24, 2017
Messages
43
Reaction score
23
Location
East Central
Yesterday I got my order from Northern Brewer and have been chomping at the bit to get started. I got the Go Pro 1 gallon kit with the Chinook IPA. Everything is laid out on the counter and I'm ready to get brewing. This is a hobby I've wanted to do for a very long time (If I said how long it would give away my age...I'm old:D).
 
Good luck. I see upgrades in your future...lots and lots of them.
 
Here are my thoughts on my first brew day. I may have made some mistakes, as expected for my first try. I made the effort to make sure all was sanitized for the wort transfer...darned if I didn't remember the scissors and used them to cut my yeast packet. Backing up, I lost more volume then expected to evaporation, I did not have enough extra water boiled and cooled down so I added from the jug of store bought spring water I used for the batch to bring it up to the 1 gallon. It is now in the fermenter, so hopefully we will see some action in the next 24 hours. All in all a good hands on for my first brew ever.
 
GO slow and relax if you have the fermentation tempature below 70 and if you are clean the beer will be fine. But if you drink or have family that drinks then the 1 gallon batches will be up graded to larger. Keep reading the forums and you will gain alot of knowledge that you can use later or sooner.:mug:
 
Yea, but not in size of batches...just more 1 gallon fermentors.

All that effort for 10 bottles, when, with just a little more effort you can make 50 ........... I admire your conviction, and I don't know your particular circumstances, but I think it would be a pretty safe bet that most people would quickly upgrade to larger 5 gallon batches.
 
WooooooHooot!!!!!!!!!!

Have fun man, I am seriously surprised at how good the beer we have made so far is. You are going to love it. But dont be afraid. Come to the darkside, YOU NEED EVERYTHING!!!!!!!!!!! MMMMWWWWWWWAAAAAAA:D:D:D
 
After 8 hours it started bubbling and has started to form a Krausen cap. This morning when I got up it is very active. Because of the equipment I have available I am staying with 1 gallon brews, however I will brew more often and am getting additional 1 gallon fermenters:)
 
Yesterday I got my order from Northern Brewer and have been chomping at the bit to get started. I got the Go Pro 1 gallon kit with the Chinook IPA. Everything is laid out on the counter and I'm ready to get brewing. This is a hobby I've wanted to do for a very long time (If I said how long it would give away my age...I'm old:D).

Well, I'm 63 and just started brewing last June and only wish I'd started a long time ago :mug:
 
All that effort for 10 bottles, when, with just a little more effort you can make 50 ........... I admire your conviction, and I don't know your particular circumstances, but I think it would be a pretty safe bet that most people would quickly upgrade to larger 5 gallon batches.

Staying small (at least for a while) does mean more frequent brewing, more variety, and getting more experience faster...
 
Just got done bottling up my first brew. Had a small amount left after getting 9 bottles from a 1 gallon batch and of course had to taste it. Aside from the fact that it was warm flat beer my wife and I ended with the consensus that it was bitter. Yea of course, it's an IPA with Chinook. Got the piney, not so much grapefruit and got the spicy. Can't wait for the conditioning period to try a carbonated cold one, maybe after a week? Did you say "more frequent brewing", after cleaning up from bottling started a gallon batch of NB Saison au Miel.
 
I too have the northern Brewer go pro one gallon kit. I also bought an extra little big mouth bubbler. Just brewed the Chinook IPA earlier today.

Another Little Big Mouth Bubbler is on my list also. If you plan on going all grain you can do 1.25 gallon batches in those:rockin:. So with two you can have 2.5 from two brew sessions. I have three items I need to get to go AG, I'm chomping at the bit. Your Chinook should be bubbling away, have fun:mug:
 
Another Little Big Mouth Bubbler is on my list also. If you plan on going all grain you can do 1.25 gallon batches in those:rockin:. So with two you can have 2.5 from two brew sessions.
I have three items I need to get to go AG, I'm chomping at the bit.
Your Chinook should be bubbling away, have fun:mug:

Go for it!!!!!!
 
I just brewed the Chinook IPA yesterday. I have the same go pro one gallon kit as well. I ordered an extra little big mouth bubbler, & the super agata bench capper too. Prior to this I was brewing all caned extract. My first brew day with Northern Brewer went well. So far I'm really liking their products.
 
i started with 5 gallons , thought 10 gallons would make satisfy my needs, already wish i went 1/2 barrel ! 1 gallon will suffice , if your brewing everyday haha. glad to see another brewer among us
 
So it looks nice. How did it taste after carbonation? I am bottling my first batch of the Chinook IPA this weekend. This is also my first batch and the only thing I would have done differently is skip the racking to the secondary. That my have been the one area where I might have contaminated or over oxygenated the brew with some siphon problems. Seems like the secondary fermenter is more hassle and risk than it's worth.
 
So it looks nice. How did it taste after carbonation? I am bottling my first batch of the Chinook IPA this weekend. This is also my first batch and the only thing I would have done differently is skip the racking to the secondary. That my have been the one area where I might have contaminated or over oxygenated the brew with some siphon problems. Seems like the secondary fermenter is more hassle and risk than it's worth.

The taste was very good:D. That was actually not the first one I had, but I wanted to post a pic of my very first batch. From what I have learned on HBT is that secondary is becoming less common. I did not move to a secondary.
 
From my past experience the strong bitterness goes away after a few weeks in the bottle, so I wouldn't worry about that.
I thought about brewing 2-3 gallon batches, keeps the cost down, esp if you love making higher abv beers.
 
The taste was very good:D. That was actually not the first one I had, but I wanted to post a pic of my very first batch. From what I have learned on HBT is that secondary is becoming less common. I did not move to a secondary.

Congrats! Looks great! Nice head on that one.

Good call on the skipping secondary. I have never racked and all of my beers have been perfectly fine. Letting beer sit on the yeast for more than 2-3 months is where you start getting into sketchy territory. 2 weeks is plenty fine. Not to mention transferring increases infection opportunities.

Any chance you will look at all grain brew in a bag? 1 gallon BIAB would be a blast and give you full control over your mash. I would suggest a couple more extract kits to nail your practices down and then spend the $15 for a bag and make the jump to all grain. That's literally all it takes. You'll also save money as extract is more expensive than grains.

Welcome to the hobby! :mug:
 
Any chance you will look at all grain brew in a bag? 1 gallon BIAB would be a blast and give you full control over your mash. I would suggest a couple more extract kits to nail your practices down and then spend the $15 for a bag and make the jump to all grain. That's literally all it takes. You'll also save money as extract is more expensive than grains.

Already made the move. Brewed my first AG yesterday https://www.homebrewtalk.com/showthread.php?t=627008. I am gonna focus on doing some SMaSH's and "Brew on the ones" just to get comfortable with base grain and hop relationships. I also want to get more into water chem. Right now I am using the stove top mash method and it worked real well yesterday, although a bit cumbersome. I had a bit of trub that made it into the fermenter, which the yeast had to push up through. It took longer then I thought it would, but it is finally working away with a healthy looking krausen.:ban: I want better filtering so when I get my cooler mash tun put together i am also gonna get a bag.

Cheers:mug:
 
Don't worry about trub making it into the fermentor. I recently learned it has little to no negative effect on the beer. Brulosophy did a study on is where they brewed one batch with no trub and one batch with trub in the fermentor. No big difference between the two. I looked into it because I was frustrated by coming under my final volume due to trub loss and being afraid to stir my wort around my chiller for fear of screwing up the trub catching the cold break and the proteins not settling. Turns out it is a nonissue. Knowing this will knock about an hour off my brew day for cooling and transfer time.
 
Back
Top