I'm still new to this Homebrewing thing. Starter kit came with LME and so I purchased more because that's what I learned with. So now I have a small inventory of LME.
In order to switch to BIAB/all grain/partial grain, I'd have to upgrade to more than just a kettle on my kitchen stove.
I currently don't have a ton of space, no garage, not a great basement, yadda yadda...
I was in the process of buying a house with a dope garage used for motorcycle restoration. That's on hold now.
Thanks, Corona!
Anyhow... When should I begin to upgrade? How long am I able to brew with LME (and maybe steeping grains) before I'm an old loser?
Thanks.
First, there’s nothing “wrong” with extract brewing and it doesn’t make anybody a “loser”. Each person has unique circumstances and the object is to make beer as best we can. Not all homebrewers do all grain. You can make great beers with extract and many do. Yes, there are some brewing snobs who look down on extract brewing, but they are usually misinformed and there’s no reason to.
Extract comes in a can in liquid form, but its more like a thick syrup. It also comes in a bag in dry or powder form. I find the dry form easier to measure and work with, especially when using partial packages. Once you open a can, its a sticky mess and I find I pretty much have to use the whole can. Much easier to save half a bag of powder, etc.
Extracts come in extra-light, light, amber, dark, pilsen, and wheat. So you still have lots of creative control and you can go even further by supplementing with specialty grains you steep in a small bag, sort of like making tea. Your homebrew shop can grind these for you so you don’t need a mill or a mash tun.
The advantages of extract brewing are time and convenience. Someone has already done the “work” for you of seperating the sugars from the grain and giving them to you. All you have to do is heat water, mix it in, and go. As you said, less equipment is also needed. Every once in a while I will do an extract brew and think what a joy it is compared to an all-day all-grain brew. I especially like to use all extract to make wheat beer, as it is MUCH easier than mashing wheat. The disadvantages of extract are cost and control. One pound of extract contains the sugars of several pounds of grains. Plus the work factor. So a pound of extract costs more. Plus you don’t have exact control of what grains were used to make the extract. This is not usually a big deal. Think a pound of extract costs more, but your time is worth something too.
The advantages of all grain brewing include complete control - including starting gravity, base malts used, exact percentages of specialty grains, final color, etc. And pound for pound, grain costs less than extract, especially when purchased in 55 lb sacks. The disadvantages of all grain include equipment required and a longer brew day. Some extract brewers can get away with using a smaller pot. When you go all grain, you need a large pot that can hold your full batch volume plus, as you start with more wort and concentrate it some through evaporation. You also need to grind grain and a way to steep or mash it. In olden times we had to make a mash tun, usually out of some kind of cooler with a false bottom that acts as a strainer. Today many people do brew in a bag and you can get away without having a dedicated mash tun. Long as your brewpot is big enough, you pretty much just have to buy a bag. And come up with a way to be able to lift and drain said bag. Each of these methods has advantages and disadvantages I won’t go into.
A brew bag or mash tun also has a finite capacity so I will also use extract to bring a beer up in gravity when I want to make a barleywine or imperial stout. Since my mash tun won’t hold 17 lbs of grain to make 3 gallons of beer. : )
There are also now electric kettle systems you can buy that operate as all in one systems. Some people with small space requirements use these. Robobrew, GrainFather, Anvil Foundry, etc.
The bottom line is there is no “wrong” way to make beer. Do what works for you. You are the one who has to drink it.
If the desire is to go all grain, I’d advise buying the equipment gradually as you can afford it. Start with a large, quality SS brewpot that is larger than the batch you intend to make. I primarily brew 3 gallons at a time so I have a 5 gallon brewpot. For 5 gallon batches, I’d recommend an 8 gallon pot. And a good, long SS brew spoon. Next your second purchase if you don’t already have one should be a wort chiller, as it is one of the pieces of equipment that will give you the most impact the fastest.
Then an 8 gallon pot will be hard to work with on your stovetop (another reason I have chosen to do 3 gallons) so you might want to consider an outdoor cooker or burner. Now you’re banishing yourself to the garage or driveway.
Far as all grain, you can build a mash tun out of a cooler, many plans can be found online. Stainless false bottoms for the round Gott coolers don’t cost that much. Then you need a ball valve for the cooler. They sell kits or you can get one at Home Depot. Or you can go the bag and pulley method. Many here recommend Willser bags. Somebody please correct me if I don’t have that name exactly right.
Then you want a malt mill.
Or if you get an all in one system - you just pay for it and get everything at once except the grain mill. Thats why these have become attractive in recent years.