First Kit Brew Success Story

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cardigan

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Just had the first sample from my very first home brew effort, 40 pints of Muntons Gold Old English Bitter 100% LME, and I would call it a success. The process went as follows:

BREW DAY (BD)
(1) Cleaned all fermenting kit including tin opener and the LME cans using soda crystals (1 tablespoon/litre) then sterilised everything with a weak bleach solution (75ml bleach for 25l water). Triple rinse with clean water after each stage.
(2) Rehydrated yeast using 100mm of boiled water cooled to 33oC (jug and thermometer having been sterilised) and covered jug with cling-film.
(3) LME tins placed in boiling water to soften contents before emptying into FV. Tins rinsed with boiling water (hot-hot-hot) to get all LME and then 5 gal of well aerated cold water added. Everything stirred for 5 minutes.
(4) Yeast pitched at 20oC and everything stirred again.
(5) Unable to check OG because cack-handed me broke my hydrometer.
(5) FV moved to cellar (ambient temp 17oC) and the heater added. The heater was previously tested to maintain a 20oC temp in an equal volume of water.

BD+1
In the morning a little yeast activity was noted but not enough. I therefore wrapped the FV in blankets and sleeping bag before leaving for work. In the evening it was obvious fermentation was well underway.

BD+5
First fermentation appeared to have stopped.

BD+15 TRANSFER TO KING-KEG (KK = 0)
(1) Cleaned all kegging kit, including tap, using soda crystals then sterilised everything with a weak bleach solution. Triple rinse with clean water after each stage.
(2) Prepared priming solution: 146g of spray malt boiled up with 500ml of water. Allowed to cool before adding to bottom of KK.
(3) Sample taken from FV: FG showing 1012
(4) Syphon set with boiling water before careful transfer from FV to KK.
(5) KK closed having coated seals with Vaseline.
(6) KK moved to cellar (ambient temp 18oC) and wrapped in sleeping bag.

KK+14
Sleeping bag removed and beer poured...
Excellent carbonation and full head; good pressure in keg. Good colour, albeit cloudy, and nice aroma. Second and third sample glasses very drinkable.
(When I figure out how to post pictures I'll put some up.)

KK+15
Further sample taken (for benefit of brother-in-law) and beer clarity has improved since cool coniditioning started (i.e. no insulation and cellar temp at 17oC).

I now intend to leave it alone till KK+25 (i.e. two weeks of cool conditioning) before trying another sample, and my target is KK+42 (i.e. four weeks) before the beer is fair-game.

The process I have followed has been assembled from all the excellent information available on this and other home-brew forums and other publications. A big thank you to everyone who has taken time over the years to bring all this together in one location.

"Chin-chin!"
 
Nice post cardigan!

(5) Unable to check OG because cack-handed me broke my hydrometer.

heh heh .. join the club! Glad you enjoyed the brew!
 
Hi C... Well done...I had Muntons at the start of my home brew...many years ago...now back into it but going down the AG road...all most there just the pipe w**k to finish...

Time to get another one in the FV :thumb:

Ps...there's a "How to" on photos
 
Tony said:
Nice post cardigan!

(5) Unable to check OG because cack-handed me broke my hydrometer.

heh heh .. join the club! Glad you enjoyed the brew!

I've got 10 hydrometers and haven't broken one yet, all other forms of glassware end up as shards with me though. ;)

Great to hear your first kit has gone well though, first one is make or break with so many first time brewers. :thumb:
 
Thanks for all the positive comments gents; much appreciated and very encouraging.

I'm interested in consistency so I'm planning on brewing another batch of the same Muntons Gold Old English Bitter straight away, but this time I'll explore how to use finings.

This will be followed by a few more kits (probably six in total), before trying extract brewing in preparation for AG.

Keep brewing and keep drinking.
 
cardigan said:
before trying extract brewing in preparation for AG.

Keep brewing and keep drinking.

:thumb: Good stuff - the exact route I took, around 15kits, 1 extract then AG - all in under six months :lol: The forum is an excellent place to learn and share brewing experiences - it taught me everything about brewing :thumb:
 
Well done, excellent post. I believe that whether you are making kits in a bucket or ag on a complex setup it is really important to have some documented process that you can refer back to.

Keep up the good work. :thumb:
 
good to hear mate, i seem to have had a good first brew aswell - read here http://www.thehomebrewforum.co.uk/viewtopic.php?f=21&t=9266

was in the fv for 15 days then only bottled and chilled after 5 days and took a wee cheeky bottle to see what it was like and it was superb. it would be a complete pain in the arse if ur first brew wasnt very nice!
just opened my first turbo cider after 10 days in the fv and 10 days in bottle, didnt chill it just opened it straight from the garage, its still really cloudy but thats cos the bottle fell a few times whilst transporting it from the house to the garage, it has good carbonation but is really sweet.sour, it has a kick, i'll be leaving it a few mora weeks methinks.ive mixed it with a bottle of bulmers in a pint glass and its superb
btw ur images didnt work :cheers:
 
Thanks again lads - this kind of feedback is really encouraging. One thing I'm quickly reading is that preparation and documentation is really important.
 
Well done and welcome to the obsession/hobby :lol: Nothing better than the satisfaction gained from enjoying your very own pint eh!

Good results are important, they keep you brewing, wealth of info here to assist.

Cheers,

Screwy
 

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