Phew, I see some people use an aeration stone and pure oxygen at this point in the processYou're talking about aerating the cold wort before pitching the yeast, which is very different and is considered good practice.
That one's the biggest myth!Brewing at home saves you money
just the other day I was told this. Don't you you need the blanket of CO2 to protect it from oxidation? If there is no CO2 due to there being a non fully sealed fermenting bucket, meaning CO2 is escaping, does thay mean oxygen is getting in? Therefore oxidation will happen inevitably?Well there will be a CO2 gradient which is more dense closer to the surface of the beer as long as it's being produced, but unless it's in a perfectly sealed environment it will gradually mix with the atmosphere, especially if the FV is opened.
I’m not sure any of us hold those myths dear! The “blow your head off”/rocket fuel myth does my head in, but I do think more people are coming around to the idea that people brew beer in the same way people bake.Brewing is hard
Homebrew is ****
It’ll blow your head off/make you blind
Brewer’s all have beards and beer bellies
I didn’t just give bottles of beer to a random bloke fixing my car).
I've never used it in most ferments as it's not needed. I believe (but correct me if I'm wrong) yeast gets it's nutrients from the wort and aeration. However, some strains are deficient in nutrients and require more for a healthier fermentation, for example kveik. I think nutrients are useful for culturing up yeast which isn't too healthy.Yeast nutrient, servomyces etc, is it really necessary, can you tell the difference in a blind test ?
Here on the continent, people are always genuinely interested when one mentions homebrewing. Maybe because there is also no lore about cheap beer kits here.A home brew is rocket fuel and blows your head off...
I get this off nearly everyone who I mention brewing to...
Then there's the "do you sell it"..
Then..."it always tastes dreadful..
Then "do you put loads of extra sugar in the BOTTLE to make it stronger?"
I don't mention brewing much now...
Well, mine tastes at least as good However, I have also tasted professionally produced beers from microbrewers, which had errors that I had encountered myself.At the risk of starting another pointless debate, one of my favourite myths is "my homebrew tastes better than any of that stuff you can buy".
Here on the continent, people are always genuinely interested when one mentions homebrewing. Maybe because there is also no lore about cheap beer kits here.
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