Before I start I'm going to come clean and admit that this was only my second kit so please forgive any naivety.
I previously had a disastrous Razorback IPA which ended up down the sink. Nothing wrong with the kit, I suspect it ended up acrid having brewed it at 28-30 degrees in the heatwave (remember that?).
Not wishing to make the same mistake again I waited until the weather cooled down and invested in an immersion heater for this one.
The kit itself is similarly impressive to those from Festival. No additional sugar with this as it comes with a hefty 4kg of malt. Other ingredients are the hop teabag and sachet of yeast.
The bag of malt itself is simple yet of genius design with basically a screw cap to pour the malt out, then put your rinsing water in, replace cap, shake, pour out the remainder.
Everything peachy so far. SG 1055, yeast pitched, left alone.
Wouldn't call it a particularly lively fermentation and the krausen didn't reach spectacular proportions. It mainly just looked very flat with no foam. Herein lies the issue. I got it down to around 1022 after around 8/10 days prior to adding the hop teabag which produced another bout of fermentation to take it down to 1018.
The target FG is 1012 so it was getting there. After a couple of days I checked again and it was still at 1018 so I slightly agitated affairs and left it alone for another couple of days. It eventually went down to (generously) 1016 and would not move any further.
This isn't that far away but I'm a pedant and was concerned that it hadn't gone all the way and finished me off with a happy ending. (Insert further innuendos of your choice here).
The temperature was a constant 22 degrees so should have been ample but it refused to go the last little bit.
Batch primed with 100g T&L and all bottled (40 pints).
The sneaky taste of the leftovers boded well but had a very strong malt taste to it which I hoped would go away following secondary and conditioning.
After a couple of weeks conditioning I moved it into the garage and left it for another week before a cheeky tester. Not bad but still overpowering maltiness.
Since then I've had one every week to see if its getting better. Now six weeks in and still very malty with a pronounced "home brew tang". If you can get through that though it's a reasonable bitter with a good head and certainly tatstes of the north. Imagine drinking liquid coal whilst stood out in the mist on the top of the moors and you'll get some idea of what I mean.
Overall nice kit, perfectly drinkable bitter but very malty. I suspect it may have stuck slightly.
I'm going to leave it alone for a few weeks now to see if the tang and the malt disappear with time. Will report back!
These are sold on the basis that they're all malt and have specialised yeast strains to ferment it all out. My first thoughts are that it's not quite there yet, I'd rather have had less malt and a full fermentation.
Back to a Festival Pride of London Porter now!