I am looking to get into home brewing and looking at a deluxe all in one kit. I have a few questions though. Is bottling really very frustrating or tedious? Should I consider just investing in a keg kit? How quickly do people grow out of the extract kits and go full grain? Should I start off with the extract kits just to dip my toes in the water, or can I just go full grain from the start? I like the idea of home brewing because of the thought of creating my own brews, and I just don't get that feeling from the extract kits. Its really seems that it is just making a brew from a box. Is it difficult to make good brews from full grain?
First, how much beer do you drink, how quickly do you go through it, and how many neighbors, friends, and relatives do you think you’ll be supplying?
The homebrew world has traditionally revolved around 5 gallon batches. In years gone by, some people decided that was a good return for investment on the brew day. 5 gallons will be about 50 bottles of beer when all is said and done. That’s 2 cases plus a couple bottles of the same beer.
In more recent times, some people started brewing smaller batches. I brew 3 gallons, which works out to about 30 bottles, or a case plus a 6 pack. I like variety and having a few different beers on hand. I found if I brew 5 batches, that’s over 10 cases of beer in 5 gallon batches. 5 cases plus 5 six packs in 3 gallon batches. Some guys brew 1 gallon batches, figure that’s 10 bottles of beer.
The stores and online places sell equipment packages that are mostly designed around 5 gallon batches. After buying the basic equipment kit, which usually includes a plastic fermenter bucket, syphon cane and tubing, bottle filler, bottle capper, hydrometer, stick on thermometer and few other bits - you need a brew pot big enough to hold more than your entire batch. You can’t boil 5 gallons in a 5 gallon pot. The pot should be stainless steel, and the big pot is one of the biggest initial investments starting out.
I would also recommend a quality SS brewing spoon which won’t cost much. Then your next investment should be a wort chiller. Everyone starts out trying to cool their boiling pot in the sink in cold water. The bigger the batch the more mass the longer it will take to cool. A wort chiller will be your biggest bang for the buck at that point.
Kit beers are not a bad way to start out. They are recipes someone put together for you, since you are not up to creating your own recipes yet. Some guys only brew extract and that’s a common question - “when is it time to graduate to all grain?” There is no answer to that. It’s up to each brewer what they want to do. After you get a few batches under your belt and start to learn what the different grains are and what they are for, then you can start building your own recipes. There are some good software packages you can buy for this.
Brew in a Bag (BIAB) is a good place to start if you want to start trying all grain. You can read about it online. Or now there are electric all in one systems which are more convenient to use.
Far as bottling, I don’t find it that much of a chore. But again, I’m filling 30 at a time. I think it’s part of the total homebrew experience and you should do it if nothing else for the experience before you decide whether you want to make that investment in kegs. I have a kegerator set up for homebrew kegs and I still bottle. I do both.
Hope some of this helps