I will say though, a friend and I have both brewed this and neither of us can manage more than 5x 500ml bottles before being black out drunk (his wife found him naked on their landing) and it does give you a rather large hangover/dry mouth the next day.
:razz: M & S do a similar bottle full of lemonade or strawberry or something,when on offer they are about £1.50 or £2 :party:I started my second brew on 3rd August and, despite being kept at 22 - 25 degrees, it's still fermenting - much longer than the instructions suggest. I finished the last bottle of the first batch a few weeks ago and am looking forward to the current one.
I'm 'making do' with a very disappointing lager from Coopers while waiting for the evil dog.
On the subject of bottles I was pleased to find that one can still get swing-top bottles, though at a steepish price; my local Tesco stocks some French lemonade (Geyer Freres) at about £3:50 for 750 ml (avoid the pink one - it has a positively foul-tasting sweetener in it!). I've recently seen one of these bottles offered on Ebay as 'antique' simply because there is the foundation date of 1895 moulded in the glass. The French must have been technologically advanced to have made such a good plastic sealing washer 109 years ago!
The Range also sell 500ml brown swing top bottles in boxes of 12 for about £12-£15 (can't remember exact price).
And Asda usually have a 3 for £5 deal on swing top bottles of Grolsch. they're only 450ml and green glass but have the advantage of coming complete with beer.
Interesting one, Les, the Coopers Stout always seems OK after about 10 days! Might have gone out to 10 weeks, but am interested in how you think it has developed over the 10 months.its a mistake us homebrewers make, trying them out too early & they're not fully conditioned
I did that with a coopers bitter, it was horrid after 8 weeks in the barrel, but now after 4 months or so its really nice. i think it pays to have a good stash so we dont drink them too young.
i've got 3 bottles of 10 month old coopers stout shouting for me now so i better go & see to them:
its a mistake us homebrewers make, trying them out too early & they're not fully conditioned
I did that with a coopers bitter, it was horrid after 8 weeks in the barrel, but now after 4 months or so its really nice. i think it pays to have a good stash so we dont drink them too young.
i've got 3 bottles of 10 month old coopers stout shouting for me now so i better go & see to them:
Interesting one, Les, the Coopers Stout always seems OK after about 10 days! Might have gone out to 10 weeks, but am interested in how you think it has developed over the 10 months.
I tend to use stout to add to cider or other beers, so am intrigued.
Enter your email address to join: