Hi all,
I've made a few posts showing my ignorance/stupidity/etc, but I'm now at the point where I've had a whopping 4 brew days since I decided to take this hobby (read: obsession) with beer head on in the early spring. My history is this:
1. Brew 2.5 gallon of "Goat Scrotum Ale" - extract and some grains with a "mini mash" with some cold brew coffee added. Learned the hard way what folks mean by the best beer is the last one from a batch when you're starting out... though I do have one more left that I'm hoping to save a little while longer. Drinkable, but generally mediocre.
*bought Northern's 3 kits for $20 each and an actual fermenter instead of the Mr. Beer kit fermenter*
2. Brew a 5 gallon "Dead Ringer" extract w/specialty grains batch. Follow instructions to a T and underbittered the heck out of it. I did a partial boil and ultimately there is very little in the way of IBUs (a whole post/thread from this was started by me). I learned thanks to folks here, and while it was a better tasting beer from the first one, it was sweet as expected and left some room to improve. I also screwed up after my dry hop by sealing too tight but there were no overcarbonation issues like I initially feared. Still, I hit my numbers and got a bigger pot to help me commit. It was $25 for a cheap aluminum pot that I hope to replace (more on this below).
3. Brew a 5 gallon "Bourbon Barrel Porter" extract w/specialty grains batch. Way more in the boil, and the samples from the hydrometer have been the best tasting so far. Ultimately I learned a bit about yeast from this one. The Danstar Windsor yeast that they recommend is awful touchy. If I were to recommend anything to someone who stumbles across this thread it would be to substitute a different yeast. The flavor it produced was good, but it crapped out and left me around 1.030. I repitched before I added the bourbon, but ultimately I am a bit frustrated as it appears to be a common issue with this kit. Either it needs a different yeast, better control of temps (I don't have much...) or it has unfermentable sugar.
3. Second go at "Dead Ringer" but with a twist. Williams Brewing had a good sale, so I went in on some Simcoe and Amarillo hops. since I used extra Centennial to dry hop the first Dead Ringer, I am doing late additions (15 min through dry hopping) with Simcoe and Amarillo this time. The first hydrometer reading yesterday was better, and happily not as sweet as the first go-round.
Where to go next? At this point, my equipment list is:
7.5 gallon aluminum pot
two 7 gallon fermonsters
a hop bag, scale, hydrometer, long spoon, blah blah blah.
It's the basics and I feel like I have gotten a good bit out of it. I have a better understanding of the process at this point and I'm still very interested in growing the hobby as I've had an absolute blast and made some drinkable beer.
I'm debating a few items, and would love comments/votes as to where to go next. As I have debated my next move at length, some opinions from those who have walked through it would help. I'm interested in all grain, which is where my existing pot and kitchen will hit its limit. My kitchen is not ideal for a brewing setup. As such I'm going to be going to the garage, basement, etc. The appeal of not investing in a very nice pot earlier is I have had my eye on the Brewer's Edge Mash and Boil, the Grainfather, and now thanks to Williams' newest addition... the Robobrew.
$300, $500, and $1000 (why go for grainfather without the connect?) are decent sized investments. I'm leaning towards the "cheaper options", and putting more money into one of two other places: DIY fermentation chambers (temp control!) or modify an exisitng minifridge/real fridge to a kegerator (draft beer/no bottles!). Given that I have approximately 4 cases of beer in two fermenters, I thought maybe I could do one of these while I wait to brew again...
I'd love to hear some thoughts as to where to invest next, and if you all wouldn't mind indulging in a comment or two as to "why", I'd greatly appreciate it. Thanks in advance, but I'm looking forward to some helpful responses that will inevitably lead to more dumb questions from yours truly!
I've made a few posts showing my ignorance/stupidity/etc, but I'm now at the point where I've had a whopping 4 brew days since I decided to take this hobby (read: obsession) with beer head on in the early spring. My history is this:
1. Brew 2.5 gallon of "Goat Scrotum Ale" - extract and some grains with a "mini mash" with some cold brew coffee added. Learned the hard way what folks mean by the best beer is the last one from a batch when you're starting out... though I do have one more left that I'm hoping to save a little while longer. Drinkable, but generally mediocre.
*bought Northern's 3 kits for $20 each and an actual fermenter instead of the Mr. Beer kit fermenter*
2. Brew a 5 gallon "Dead Ringer" extract w/specialty grains batch. Follow instructions to a T and underbittered the heck out of it. I did a partial boil and ultimately there is very little in the way of IBUs (a whole post/thread from this was started by me). I learned thanks to folks here, and while it was a better tasting beer from the first one, it was sweet as expected and left some room to improve. I also screwed up after my dry hop by sealing too tight but there were no overcarbonation issues like I initially feared. Still, I hit my numbers and got a bigger pot to help me commit. It was $25 for a cheap aluminum pot that I hope to replace (more on this below).
3. Brew a 5 gallon "Bourbon Barrel Porter" extract w/specialty grains batch. Way more in the boil, and the samples from the hydrometer have been the best tasting so far. Ultimately I learned a bit about yeast from this one. The Danstar Windsor yeast that they recommend is awful touchy. If I were to recommend anything to someone who stumbles across this thread it would be to substitute a different yeast. The flavor it produced was good, but it crapped out and left me around 1.030. I repitched before I added the bourbon, but ultimately I am a bit frustrated as it appears to be a common issue with this kit. Either it needs a different yeast, better control of temps (I don't have much...) or it has unfermentable sugar.
3. Second go at "Dead Ringer" but with a twist. Williams Brewing had a good sale, so I went in on some Simcoe and Amarillo hops. since I used extra Centennial to dry hop the first Dead Ringer, I am doing late additions (15 min through dry hopping) with Simcoe and Amarillo this time. The first hydrometer reading yesterday was better, and happily not as sweet as the first go-round.
Where to go next? At this point, my equipment list is:
7.5 gallon aluminum pot
two 7 gallon fermonsters
a hop bag, scale, hydrometer, long spoon, blah blah blah.
It's the basics and I feel like I have gotten a good bit out of it. I have a better understanding of the process at this point and I'm still very interested in growing the hobby as I've had an absolute blast and made some drinkable beer.
I'm debating a few items, and would love comments/votes as to where to go next. As I have debated my next move at length, some opinions from those who have walked through it would help. I'm interested in all grain, which is where my existing pot and kitchen will hit its limit. My kitchen is not ideal for a brewing setup. As such I'm going to be going to the garage, basement, etc. The appeal of not investing in a very nice pot earlier is I have had my eye on the Brewer's Edge Mash and Boil, the Grainfather, and now thanks to Williams' newest addition... the Robobrew.
$300, $500, and $1000 (why go for grainfather without the connect?) are decent sized investments. I'm leaning towards the "cheaper options", and putting more money into one of two other places: DIY fermentation chambers (temp control!) or modify an exisitng minifridge/real fridge to a kegerator (draft beer/no bottles!). Given that I have approximately 4 cases of beer in two fermenters, I thought maybe I could do one of these while I wait to brew again...
I'd love to hear some thoughts as to where to invest next, and if you all wouldn't mind indulging in a comment or two as to "why", I'd greatly appreciate it. Thanks in advance, but I'm looking forward to some helpful responses that will inevitably lead to more dumb questions from yours truly!