Thanks for the heads up, just bought one last night. Never brewed beer before should be good and the bits and peices will come in handy with the wine and cider making.Just came across a starter kit for cheap. It's a Northern Brewer kit which comes from the US I believe. Comes with a kit as well but the kits are past sell by date.
Home Brew Essential Starter Kit | eBay
i was looking at that very one yesterday but the low litreage put me off.These look interesting and with three different hops
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Share-Making-Brewing-malts-Fermentation/dp/B08HQS11HK
I might order the IPA but it's only 5 litres
Maybe it would make a good present to someone who has never brewed?i was looking at that very one yesterday but the low litreage put me off.
agreed. i may have amassed enough useful knowledge to pass on by the time the 'festive' season rolls around. beer isn't just for christmas however :smallMaybe it would make a good present to someone who has never brewed?
These kits look to contain the standard plastic lined CS 5 litre minikegs which, as far as I can see, are the same as most (but not all) you buy from supermarkets with beer already in them of course etc like thisThese look interesting and with three different hops
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Share-Making-Brewing-malts-Fermentation/dp/B08HQS11HK
I might order the IPA but it's only 5 litres
Wot I said about that in another thread few days backI see that manufacturer has a FAQ
"CAN YOU RE-USE A MINI KEG?
Yes and No. Many home brewers will wash and reuse a mini keg however this is not commercially viable as it is difficult to ensure the thorough cleaning of a mini keg. You are also in danger of compromising the food grade lacquer inside."
Interesting about the lacquer....
But we now know that it's a lacquer and they are not plastic lined.Wot I said about that in another thread a few days back
'My own theory about why the CS lined minikegs produce a metallic taste is that they are only really one trip and not intended to be used under pressure ... but if they are re-used and pressurised by homebrewers it flexes the joints, the thin lining cracks and that allows beer (under pressure) to access the CS, which it then corrodes. And within manufacturing tolerances, and different handling and different internal pressures used by different homebrewers, some kegs will fail early and some will last for a few brews before the metallic taste kicks in. And perhaps some may not fail at all.,
Sadly not stainless, lined (or lacquer coated) CS.But we now know that it's a lacquer and they are not plastic lined.
Drinksshop.co.uk sell re-usable, stainless-steel, five-litre mini-kegs. £8.50 plus £5 delivery.
https://www.drinksshop.co.uk/collec...-drinks-shop/products/5-litre-mini-kegs-black
It didn't in the link you originally postedhttps://www.drinksshop.co.uk/blogs/news/empty-mini-kegs-by-drinks-shop
says stainless steel
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