ROTFLMAODamn! You must be a big fellow. I could do, maybe the 2 pints, some food and then another, long as the alcohol was light on the last one. But to top it off with squid? Yech!
Even with purchasing all the good equiptment I don't think your first batch would cost that much.sue, $49 per six pack?? You must be factoring the equipment he bought, right? In any case, it is a good investment, don't you worry bout that!
Hey Russ,
Come and join us in the "Beer (again) thread. We've been missing you there. I would certainly be open to trying any beer you make with the Mr.Beer kit.
"I went to DogFish Head Brewery " "For the beer " damn good reason as they are fine brewers.
I would give Mr.Beer a try as I might get bored with a 5 gallon batch of the same stuff. Problem is I would only want to brew big beers and according to the research I have read thats like 40 bucks a case to brew :-(
Anyone near Columbus that home brews ? Perhaps we can split batches and keep new batches in the works.
Drinking a Weyerbacher QUAD now and I would love a bunch of that homebrewed :-O
The way to get around having too much of one style of beer is to brew more ... Ok, that's it, I'm going big this weekend. Any ideas on what I should brew? Dubbel, trippel, barleywine??
That's a big 10-4! The only beer I ever got bored with was domestic light types.
Barleywines are supposed to age quite a bit for the best flavor to develop, right? Like six months or so? Plus you use a huge grain bill, like about $40-50 worth?
The way to get around having too much of one style of beer is to brew more I'll usually try to brew a few weekends in a row so that I can have two or three different types on tap in a month or so. I then augment this with a nice 22 oz'er of something special from the store. If the beer is good enough it won't get boring. I mean some people drink nothing but bud or miller w/o getting bored.
Yeah the big beers like barleywines and anything "imperial" can get pretty spendy, but I think $40 is a bit high. Most of my beers end up about $20-25, even the heavier double IPA's. There's a worldwide hop shortage right now, along with a blight in the Yakima valley where most hops are grown, so you can expect inflated prices this year, jacking up the price of a batch. I have an IPA conditioning that cost $23. You can get a more alcoholic beer by simply adding table or beet sugar, which is actually appropriate to some styles like a belgian golden strong ale. And if you're using malt extract like most homebrewers start off doing, it won't be too dry and will be surprisingly "big." Ok, that's it, I'm going big this weekend. Any ideas on what I should brew? Dubbel, trippel, barleywine??
Six months at least. To get the good brandy-ish notes it should go for about 12 months. If brewing a barleywine I would brew a smaller ~4 gal batch to keep the price down and just use some table sugar to up the gravity, especially with American barleywines. I made a recipe for one a while ago but haven't gotten around to brewing it yet. I don't think I could wait that long to drink it.
Yeah, where am I going to store something like that for 6-12 months?!!
Okay, I have all the ingredients I need to make a batch this weekend. I might make my first attempt at all-grain. I want to keep it simple. I'm thinking 9 lbs. of Rahr 2-row, a pack of ale yeast, and a moderate dose of Brewer's Gold, an ounce for bittering, and another half ounce for flavoring. Any suggestions?
Sounds like a nice mellow pale ale to me. Very drinkable. I usually like to throw in a pound or so of crystal 40 for color and to make it a bit sweeter, I'm not into dry beers so much. I've never used brewers gold but from what I've read it doesn't do much besides bittering. You could always get an oz or so of cascade for flavoring/aroma, depending on availability. ... pinelands paddler, my brother and I have brewed a few 50 gallon batches.
Thanks! A pound of crystal sounds like a good idea, and I do have a few other things in the fridge for flavoring and finishing hops. 50 gallons!!! Sounds like fun.
The thing I'm really not clear on though, is how my well water will work for the mash. I know I need to shoot for a mash pH in the mid 5's, but I don't understand the chemistry well enough to figure out if I will hit that.
Thanks! A pound of crystal sounds like a good idea, and I do have a few other things in the fridge for flavoring and finishing hops. 50 gallons!!! Sounds like fun.
The thing I'm really not clear on though, is how my well water will work for the mash. I know I need to shoot for a mash pH in the mid 5's, but I don't understand the chemistry well enough to figure out if I will hit that.