Appleton Brews
Well-Known Member
The only kits I’ve brewed in the last 5 years have been Range Stout kits which are average but drinkable because the bitterness overpowers are twang. I have given up on these my stout is exponentially better.
I've got a range myo stout sitting there to do at some point, it's got a dry hop addition so this will taste better than the usual 1can kits?The only kits I’ve brewed in the last 5 years have been Range Stout kits which are average but drinkable because the bitterness overpowers are twang. I have given up on these my stout is exponentially better.
Something I know about every kit I've made, regardless of kit, is that the last pint was so much better than the first - leaving me to believe that I just need to make more beer, so that it all gets more time. Given that there is so much variation (that I experience anyway) based upon time conditioning, how do you factor this out?
I'm a bit of a newbie at brewing but not at drinking, and I do know that cask ales in the pub are highly variable in quality - usually, I presume due to cellar and turnover. I like a Wherry kit, I like a St Peter's kit - probably because (with Adnams) they are the beers that I drink in pubs and buy in bottles.
I get that it is very much a personal choice... are there really 'bad kits'? Or just unmet expectations?
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