JoeSchmoe Posted 15 hours ago Report Posted 15 hours ago I used to make hard cider for many years. I stopped around the same time I had kids, but kept my stuff. Back then I always thought beer was too much work. Then a couple months back I saw a YouTube clip on the Brew in a Bag method. I ordered a mesh bag off Amazon, got some ingredients from a homebrew store, and pulled out my old stuff. Some of my BBQ thermometers and outdoor frying equipment came in handy too. For my first batch I went with an Amber Ale. I thought it was okay, but everyone else really liked it. My second batch I've got fermenting is an IPA. I'm hoping it doesn't turn out too hoppy as I went for flavour over bitterness. My next batch will be a lighter American Wheat Beer like Blue Moon, but I think I'd like to try to sub out another flavour for the orange. Maybe lemon or lime? Any ideas? I'm thinking I'll shoot for maybe 4% over 5% as I want this to be a drink by the pool beer. Anyone else into the hobby? Any recipes or stories to share? 2 Quote
Weave Posted 8 hours ago Report Posted 8 hours ago I was heavy into the hobby until about a decade ago. Enjoy. Its a black hole of time and empty calories LOL. I made a 15 gal brewery in my garage. Had 3 taps running in the house. And was buying barley in 50lb sacks. Toyed with business plans to open a brewery, but never had the courage to leave a very good job to do it. I brewed for about 15yrs, gained 40lbs, scalded the hair off my left leg permanently, and loved doing it. I started it because when I was 30 the local beer market was almost entirely macro lagers, and if I wanted something else I had to buy it. Today I have 3 breweries with 10 miles of me in a very rural area. Beer variety is everywhere, so I don’t have to make it anymore. And I’ve lost 25 of the 40lbs since I quit. Dive in feet first. Geek out on it. Learn the chemistry. Its a blast. 2 Quote
JoeSchmoe Posted 5 hours ago Author Report Posted 5 hours ago 15gal! Wow... no way I could drink that much beer, but it would be fun to make. I could see how having convenient beer on tap all the time would cause a weight gain though. I have a 5 gallon pot I bought for boiling corn, so my batch size will be limited by that. My first batch was 2 gallons, this next batch is 3. The American Wheat will be up closer to 5 as I'll mash it out stronger, then water it down during cooling to get more volume. The hard part will be bottling as I've only got 3gal worth of bottles now. I was considering buying some cheap used growlers. Would I have to buy new caps for them or are the caps reusable? Quote
LTS Posted 4 hours ago Report Posted 4 hours ago (edited) My story is much like Weave's. I started with buckets in my townhouse about 25 years ago. Gradually worked my way up to a 30 gallon stainless, propane system with a 15G conical. Had the conical on a stand in a freezer with a temp control that would either kick in the freezer or engage an electric heat wrap as needed. Buddy and I went our separate ways and I assembled another 20G system at my house. I don't have the conical. It has sat there for years because I just don't have the time and frankly there is beer everywhere now and I can find something to drink. I still have a 3-4 tap kegerator sitting here as well but nothing in it. I'm trying to sell all of it.. not sure I will ever go back to brewing and if I did I would convert to electric. Either I'd drill into the stainless and put in heating that way or use conduction but on 30G that's a tough call. I brewed a ton of beer, enjoyed the hell out of it. Gave a ton away. Toyed with jumping into the brew business but couldn't take the financial risk at the time. I had some of the top brewers in the area giving my beer compliments so I felt like I was doing okay (they weren't just being nice, they would critique and did on some less good batches). It's a great hobby and I still sometimes wish I had the desire to do it more just so I can make some things you never find but the time and desire just isn't there any more. Wanna upgrade? https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/item/818539939096551 Edited 4 hours ago by LTS 1 Quote
JoeSchmoe Posted 4 hours ago Author Report Posted 4 hours ago For me, the draw is the suspense of not knowing what the beer is going to taste like until close to a month after you put the work in. It's like a kid waiting for Christmas. I don't think I'll ever graduate away from BIAB and get into what you guys have done, nor would my wife sign off on it. It'd be nice to have a tap, but I seriously fear Weave's story, and my willpower not to grab a pint or two with dinner is not very good. If I did, at most I could see myself getting something like this as it would easily fit in the spare fridge. https://www.vevor.ca/beer-mini-keg-c_10709/vevor-beer-growler-tap-system-170oz-5l-mini-keg-304-stainless-steel-pressurized-beer-growler-keg-growler-with-pressure-display-co2-regulator-faucet-leak-proof-ring-for-draft-homebrew-craft-beer-p_010690630801 Quote
PromoTheRobot Posted 2 hours ago Report Posted 2 hours ago I'm intrigued but never got into it. But I have let regular apple cider go bad. Quote
steveoath Posted 57 minutes ago Report Posted 57 minutes ago Never brewed as there are just so many great beers available now that I couldn't justify the setup. However, I would like to have a go a making mead. Golden Hive kits seem like a reasonable starting point. Quote
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