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I was fond of craft brewed double IPA's, these can easily be over £5 for a 440ml can. A local brewery near me was charging £6.50 for a 440ml can recently. When I brew a double IPA with 300g+ of hops, two yeast packs especially if you buy liquid yeast can easily see a £40 - £50 cost for 20 litres, 35 pints or 45 440ml cans. This would cost approx £225 if I purchased the craft equivalent. That's a £180 saving. So I thought after 4 brew days I will recover the cost of a Grainfather ! My homebrew is as good if not better sometimes than the beers I used to buy, I don't think I could do it without an all-grain system. Even when compared to supermarket craft beer prices the homebrew equivalent is massively cheaper.Just took delivery of this lot from brew2bottle so it got me thinking of the cost per pint of All Grain v Kit brewing so roughly the cost of the kit and brewing sugar, works out at the folliwing:
Ritchie Brown Ale = 29p
Mj Rose Cider = 53p
MJ Irish Red Ale = 51p
MJ Gold Lager = 31p
The cost is assuming you get the 40 pints, great value, so how does All Grain compare as fancy a go at AG but like most need to justify cost to the wifeyView attachment 25193
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