user 18576
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Not really a question this time, more of a comment.
Brewing beer from kits mainly around 5% alc. and have to say the ones I have made have come out at
5% or even a bit higher, usually with 3.5 kg of extract and varying amounts of additional sugar.
No problem so far!
However, some kits state a finished beer of 4.5% but only come with 3kg of extract and no mention of
additional sugars.
You cannot make 40 pints of 4.5% beer with only 3kg of malt. It makes roughly 4% beer.
Anybody else found this?
On a different note I use quite a few 'Festival' beer kits.
The thing I don't like about them is the pesky pouches the extract comes in, in fact after cutting the top of
one the other day the thing fell over while I was putting the scissors down - only let it go for a second and lost
half the extract in that one pouch, had to add less water to the brew to compensate.
'OH DEARY ME' I said.
Anyway, to stop it happening again I bought one of those small containers that are sometimes used in the kitchen for storing flour etc. It's just a little one from a pound shop, discard the lid and the pouch just slips
in a nice fit and no more danger of it tipping up.
Worth a try if you make Festival beers.
One of my favourites so far is Festival Summer Glory.
Paul.
Brewing beer from kits mainly around 5% alc. and have to say the ones I have made have come out at
5% or even a bit higher, usually with 3.5 kg of extract and varying amounts of additional sugar.
No problem so far!
However, some kits state a finished beer of 4.5% but only come with 3kg of extract and no mention of
additional sugars.
You cannot make 40 pints of 4.5% beer with only 3kg of malt. It makes roughly 4% beer.
Anybody else found this?
On a different note I use quite a few 'Festival' beer kits.
The thing I don't like about them is the pesky pouches the extract comes in, in fact after cutting the top of
one the other day the thing fell over while I was putting the scissors down - only let it go for a second and lost
half the extract in that one pouch, had to add less water to the brew to compensate.
'OH DEARY ME' I said.
Anyway, to stop it happening again I bought one of those small containers that are sometimes used in the kitchen for storing flour etc. It's just a little one from a pound shop, discard the lid and the pouch just slips
in a nice fit and no more danger of it tipping up.
Worth a try if you make Festival beers.
One of my favourites so far is Festival Summer Glory.
Paul.