Cavpilot2000
Well-Known Member
Coke/food is pretty much > any beer/food pairing
That's not only a contrarian opinion, them's fightin' around here!
Coke/food is pretty much > any beer/food pairing
But selection ain't all that good, it's not so innovative over there.
Yes Europe isnt good if your a fan of double chocolate peanut butter burbon barrel jalapeño sour breakfast stout or what ever the latest craft fad is.
Eye pee eh.
Duh.
Been brewing 5+ years and gone down many of the rabbit holes to improve my process but never saw any benefit to doing all grain as opposed to extract with steeped grains. I can still get the flavors and OG I want by selecting the right quantities of the right grains and using the extract instead of base grains. And I don't have to worry about all issues that could arise from improper mashing procedures/chemistry.
So far I've had no discussions with concrete enough arguments to convince me it's worth it. The Three most popular pro arguments to all grain I've heard and my associated rebuttals:
1) "it's cheaper"
-- I'm not doing this to save money, it's a hobby and I like it. Making a batch that yeilds $1/bottle vs $.50/bottle would be inconsequential.
2) "you can make it taste more specifically how you want it to."
--see paragraph above
3) "Its not THAT much more work"
--but it is more work! With more risks!
Someone tell me how uninformed I am and why I should start all-grain if I'm wrong or you disagree!
Someone tell me how uninformed I am and why I should start all-grain if I'm wrong or you disagree!
Heady Topper is THE most overrated beer in history.
Been brewing 5+ years and gone down many of the rabbit holes to improve my process but never saw any benefit to doing all grain as opposed to extract with steeped grains. I can still get the flavors and OG I want by selecting the right quantities of the right grains and using the extract instead of base grains. And I don't have to worry about all issues that could arise from improper mashing procedures/chemistry.
So far I've had no discussions with concrete enough arguments to convince me it's worth it. The Three most popular pro arguments to all grain I've heard and my associated rebuttals:
1) "it's cheaper"
-- I'm not doing this to save money, it's a hobby and I like it. Making a batch that yeilds $1/bottle vs $.50/bottle would be inconsequential.
2) "you can make it taste more specifically how you want it to."
--see paragraph above
3) "Its not THAT much more work"
--but it is more work! With more risks!
Someone tell me how uninformed I am and why I should start all-grain if I'm wrong or you disagree!
Been brewing 5+ years and gone down many of the rabbit holes to improve my process but never saw any benefit to doing all grain as opposed to extract with steeped grains. I can still get the flavors and OG I want by selecting the right quantities of the right grains and using the extract instead of base grains. And I don't have to worry about all issues that could arise from improper mashing procedures/chemistry.
So far I've had no discussions with concrete enough arguments to convince me it's worth it. The Three most popular pro arguments to all grain I've heard and my associated rebuttals:
1) "it's cheaper"
-- I'm not doing this to save money, it's a hobby and I like it. Making a batch that yeilds $1/bottle vs $.50/bottle would be inconsequential.
2) "you can make it taste more specifically how you want it to."
--see paragraph above
3) "Its not THAT much more work"
--but it is more work! With more risks!
Someone tell me how uninformed I am and why I should start all-grain if I'm wrong or you disagree!
For homebrewers and others that can't measure IBU's, I think calculating IBU's for a recipe is silly. It's like calculating a pH reading or OG, you can estimate but if you aren't measuring it, why list it like it's a measurement? Why not just stick with AAU for your boiling hops, keep careful notes and just adjust based on your results?
Just seems too Rube Goldberg-like to me when you can just figure, OK I want 10-12 AAU for bittering this beer, do the calculations with the hops you're using and be done. Adding more additions late in the boil? Experience and good notes and knowing the beer style and what you want in the beer will tell you how to adjust the hop schedule.
There, I wrote it and you can pelt me with oxidized, rotten hops if you must.
I guess for me if I'm giving a recipe to a friend or posting it I'd just list what the amount I used for a particular hop, the AA%, how long in the boil for all the hop additions. I never calculate IBU's and since I can't measure them, I don't find a purpose in calculating IBU's. Since our systems may vary results will vary. To me it would be like calculating SRM, I really can't measure that but I know from past batches how to dial in color. I just think calculating IBU's is an unnecessary step, as in what's the point, but I'm pretty sure I'm the odd brewer out.I get what you're saying but I feel like as long as the AAU numbers are accurate, we're still all using a common point of reference when we decide what hops to use, how much, and when.
Been brewing 5+ years and gone down many of the rabbit holes to improve my process but never saw any benefit to doing all grain as opposed to extract with steeped grains. I can still get the flavors and OG I want by selecting the right quantities of the right grains and using the extract instead of base grains. And I don't have to worry about all issues that could arise from improper mashing procedures/chemistry.
So far I've had no discussions with concrete enough arguments to convince me it's worth it. The Three most popular pro arguments to all grain I've heard and my associated rebuttals:
1) "it's cheaper"
-- I'm not doing this to save money, it's a hobby and I like it. Making a batch that yeilds $1/bottle vs $.50/bottle would be inconsequential.
2) "you can make it taste more specifically how you want it to."
--see paragraph above
3) "Its not THAT much more work"
--but it is more work! With more risks!
Someone tell me how uninformed I am and why I should start all-grain if I'm wrong or you disagree!
All grain in my opinion and experience is miles better then extract. No comparison.
Really who would bother with all grain if it was only a little better then extract?