Hi folks.
I've dabbled in brewing of all sorts of the years, extract kits, cider, wine, etc. But due to my casual approach I was experiencing issues with oxidisation or off-flavours. Since I never truly managed to reproduce the beers styles I loved, it was never long before I gave up due to poor tasting beers. Since 2018, having started to appreciate better quality beer, I have been nearly exclusively drinking craft beer, and had lost all desire to drink the macro-brewed commercial beers. But that comes at a cost, so I committed myself to learning where I had been going wrong and produce better beers more cheaply than the craft beers I was spending a small fortune on.
So I'm now setup with a deeper understanding of the principles of brewing great beer, a brewfather account, a low-cost DIY temp control setup, a grainfather s40, kegging equipment, I dialled in closed transfers and now have the motivation to crack this brewing skill. I've brewed a couple of blinders that the family loved, but some terrible brews that had the same people begging for a can of macro... so I'm still early on in my learning journey. I have struggled with the desire to brew loads of different styles of beer, rather than producing predictable results every time, I'm going back to my popular brews now so I always have some on tap, and reserving one keg for my experiements.
My last mistake was buying an off the shelf 25L batch grain kit, and down-scaling it (quite poorly) for my 19L corny keg fermenter setup, the grains arrived pre-mixed and I didn't mix sufficiently to keep the percentages in check when mashing, I also forget to scale the hops relative to the grain and ended up with an undrinkable NEIPA. I did end up wasting a £35 kit, that stung, and disappointed me, but I'm learning what not to do quickly.
Here is to a lot less mistakes, and long may the blinders flow.
I've dabbled in brewing of all sorts of the years, extract kits, cider, wine, etc. But due to my casual approach I was experiencing issues with oxidisation or off-flavours. Since I never truly managed to reproduce the beers styles I loved, it was never long before I gave up due to poor tasting beers. Since 2018, having started to appreciate better quality beer, I have been nearly exclusively drinking craft beer, and had lost all desire to drink the macro-brewed commercial beers. But that comes at a cost, so I committed myself to learning where I had been going wrong and produce better beers more cheaply than the craft beers I was spending a small fortune on.
So I'm now setup with a deeper understanding of the principles of brewing great beer, a brewfather account, a low-cost DIY temp control setup, a grainfather s40, kegging equipment, I dialled in closed transfers and now have the motivation to crack this brewing skill. I've brewed a couple of blinders that the family loved, but some terrible brews that had the same people begging for a can of macro... so I'm still early on in my learning journey. I have struggled with the desire to brew loads of different styles of beer, rather than producing predictable results every time, I'm going back to my popular brews now so I always have some on tap, and reserving one keg for my experiements.
My last mistake was buying an off the shelf 25L batch grain kit, and down-scaling it (quite poorly) for my 19L corny keg fermenter setup, the grains arrived pre-mixed and I didn't mix sufficiently to keep the percentages in check when mashing, I also forget to scale the hops relative to the grain and ended up with an undrinkable NEIPA. I did end up wasting a £35 kit, that stung, and disappointed me, but I'm learning what not to do quickly.
Here is to a lot less mistakes, and long may the blinders flow.