Welcome to the forum
Are you going to make Beer, Wine or Cider?
.
I was thinking about getting a starter set, Do you think that's the best option for a newbie?
Hiya. Depends if you want to do kits, BIAB or AG, AG could be an all in one automated system or three vessel.
Welcome to the forum!
Before you start out do plenty of reading, you can read John Palmer's How to Brew online for free, it's slightly old now but I found it helpful to learn the basic process of brewing.
Kits are by far the easiest way to start brewing but the results can be more Tui than Tuatara (i.e. cheap and nasty vs craft) if you use a cheap 1 can kit with a kilo of sugar. Better results can be had with using malt extract instead of sugar and even adding dry hops or hop tea. All grain (often called AG on this forum) is a steep learning curve and a bigger outlay to start with but has the potential for much better results. Brew in a bag (BIAB) is a relatively easy and affordable way to get into grain brewing with just a grain bag and something big that can hold a good boil. If I had the money I'd get a single vessel all grain brewing system like the Grainfather (if I was on NZ I'd probably get the Robobrew with the pump as it's much cheaper). Whatever method you choose you'll need a fermenter and something to package the beer in e.g bottles or kegs and a way of transferring it from the fermenter.
I lived in NZ and started brewing out there (I'm back in the UK now). I started out with the Coopers starter kit which had everything included to do a first kit beer including brown PET plastic bottles. The fermenter has changed since I got mine but at the time the quality was good. The lager kit made with a kilo of brewing sugar wasn't great, but it got me started. Many of the major supermarkets also stock coopers kits (Pak'nSave often had them reduced and sold bottle caps and carbonation drops too) which are relatively cheap out there. The premium (all malt with added dry hops) kits sold in homebrew shops are quite expensive though, $55-$59 for the better ones, so I preferred to use the coopers kits as a base and add hops, malt extract or enhancer, experiment with different yeast etc.
Most of the homebrew shops sell starter kits, find one that includes bottles unless you have a suitable source of empty beer bottles.
The best homebrew shops I used were Brewers Coop in Auckland for their big range and The Brewhouse in Wellington for their quality and customer service.
I hope this is all helpful, good luck!
You will also need sanitiser and a means of getting the finished beer to the bottles there will be more and I am sure the beer brewers will add to the list.
.
Wow that's a good quality fermenter in that set and a nice looking beer kit, the Mangrove Jacks craft series stuff is good.
Getting a bottling wand (they're only a few dollars) that fits the tap on your fermenter will make your life way easier and less messy at bottling time and will make sure the finished beer isn't oxidised, which will make the beer taste stale.
The sanitiser makes sure no bacteria grows in your beer causing an infection. Everything that touches the beer both before and after fermentation should be sanitised first. The best thing is a proper brewing no-rinse sanitiser like starsan, it seems expensive but goes a long way. Brewshop sells an unbranded version that's really good value https://www.brewshop.co.nz/brewing-other/cleaning/stellarsan-sanitiser-500ml.html. I tried using domestic bleach but it leaves a taste if you don't spend ages rinsing several times.
.......... Why don't people using alcohol? ...........
...get some brown trousers for that. Blame the stench on the dog....
Enter your email address to join: