I love real ale and have recently gravitated towards the hoppier styles such as Oakham Citra and DarkStar Hoppy Head. The problem is I'm now hooked on vindaloos in a world of kormas....TT Landlord, a great pint, now seems to lack the kick I've got used to.
I've never homebrewed before. I've been reading up and think I understand as much as I can until I actually mash in for the first time but essentially I know nothing. What's confusing me is the different products available from raw ingredients to extract kits and I'm not sure which are good and which will turn into something that will send me down the pub for a real pint.
Ultimately I want to create my own beers using raw malt and calculating my own hop additions but for the time being I'm wondering if beer kits are the best way to start. Coopers kits look like you get grain and hops so you need to mash in to get a wort before boiling etc. extract kits I guess go straight to the boiling stage (some of them aren't clear as to what you get and what you need to do)
Can anyone tell me what these kits are really like to brew with and to drink?
1) Is using a Coopers or Muntons beer kit real home brewers do or are they for fools who aren't really serious? I'm paranoid there will be some homebrewers' snobbery against these sort of things :-) Are they a serious product you guys use or more a gift idea for male relatives?
2) DO they work? I guess the recipies might not be great but are they at least drinkable?
3) Which packs are best? As much as I like the idea of getting 25kg of Maris Otter etc. and making my own recipies some of these packs basically seem to be pre-weighed ingredients (obviously). Do they make me less of a brewer? Is the enjoyment in the production of beer (like cooking to a recipe) or the invention of your own beers.
4) Malt vs Extract? Seems to me that boiling and adding hops then waiting a couple of weeks to ferment and condition misses out most of the fun. That said, is it worth it to ensure a good wort as this looks to be a challenge for homebrewers?
Basically if experienced homebrewers don't use these kits I might as well jump strainght in the deep end, fowl-up more but learn faster. Any insight you may have would be a tremendous help.
Cheers
I've never homebrewed before. I've been reading up and think I understand as much as I can until I actually mash in for the first time but essentially I know nothing. What's confusing me is the different products available from raw ingredients to extract kits and I'm not sure which are good and which will turn into something that will send me down the pub for a real pint.
Ultimately I want to create my own beers using raw malt and calculating my own hop additions but for the time being I'm wondering if beer kits are the best way to start. Coopers kits look like you get grain and hops so you need to mash in to get a wort before boiling etc. extract kits I guess go straight to the boiling stage (some of them aren't clear as to what you get and what you need to do)
Can anyone tell me what these kits are really like to brew with and to drink?
1) Is using a Coopers or Muntons beer kit real home brewers do or are they for fools who aren't really serious? I'm paranoid there will be some homebrewers' snobbery against these sort of things :-) Are they a serious product you guys use or more a gift idea for male relatives?
2) DO they work? I guess the recipies might not be great but are they at least drinkable?
3) Which packs are best? As much as I like the idea of getting 25kg of Maris Otter etc. and making my own recipies some of these packs basically seem to be pre-weighed ingredients (obviously). Do they make me less of a brewer? Is the enjoyment in the production of beer (like cooking to a recipe) or the invention of your own beers.
4) Malt vs Extract? Seems to me that boiling and adding hops then waiting a couple of weeks to ferment and condition misses out most of the fun. That said, is it worth it to ensure a good wort as this looks to be a challenge for homebrewers?
Basically if experienced homebrewers don't use these kits I might as well jump strainght in the deep end, fowl-up more but learn faster. Any insight you may have would be a tremendous help.
Cheers