Thanks for accepting me to the forum. I am from central Scotland. I have absolutely no experience whatsoever as yet but looking forward to the challenges and the fingers crossed, decent drinkable beer at the end. Cheers
Hi mash,Welcome.
What the plan Davie?
Doing a few kits, or a big splash into grains? (sorry about the unintentional pun - but it sort of worked so I left it )
Hi mash,
Thanks for the message,
I'll be honest with you from the start, I have never brewed anything or even know anyone personally who has as yet, so it is all a bit new, so Im trying to gain a little knowledge via forums, Facebook groups and YouTube etc.
At this stage I'm still research, research, research. I will most definitely be starting with a few kits first to get started I think. As long as I can make something drinkable that would be the aim Long term I would like to keg and build a kegerator. But there are so many options out there, with different kit and set ups, whether it's better to start with just a starter kit of a couple of buckets and bottles and see where we go from there or invest that bit more starting out to make life a bit easier in the long run and get more consistent results.
Not a terrible idea. Good fermentation conditions is the difference between beer you'll want to drink and beer you'll want to pour down the drain. No point in spending 20-25 quid on ingredients only to fall at the last hurdle on fermentation.Yea that's the plan, I'd be starting with kits 100% and there is no way I'd be forking out for the all in one expensive grain father's etc without being experienced enough, and I wouldn't have enough money for that anyway only thing I'm making my mind up on is whether to fork out a bit more and get a pressure fermenter and gas to start with or not or just getting the buckets with a heat belt.
Inkbird works well on a bucket with a sleeping bag.
Bottle it don't keg. It's easier to start with and you get to keep a few from each batch to compare. (and learn).
Scrouge bottles from the pub. For free.
Sorry did I say "Scrouge" , I meant environmentally recycle
I was looking at kegging but I think your right, bottling would be the best way. Would make it easy to compare when start tinkering about a bit to compare results and hopefully improvements on the journey.Inkbird works well on a bucket with a sleeping bag.
Bottle it don't keg. It's easier to start with and you get to keep a few from each batch to compare. (and learn).
Scrouge bottles from the pub. For free.
Sorry did I say "Scrouge" , I meant environmentally recycle.
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