My first post to this forum: My Son, observing that I shared his taste in beer presented me with a complete DIY homebrew start up kit for my last birthday. To get me going he added a St Peter's IPA kit. This turned out to be the perfect choice for a first crack at brewing and four weeks later I was drinking this very drinkable IPA. Clear and hoppy and I would guess not far of 5% abv. I didn't take s.g.s on this first kit. It wasn't long before I was in 4U2Brew in Fareham looking for my next kit; something a bit hoppier and walked out with a Young's AIPA kit. I have been doing my primary fermenting in my kitchen and find the most constant temperature, typically 16 to 20C, to be on the kitchen worktop above my central heating boiler. This had worked well for the St Peters and since the weather was now gotting cooler, I made a jacket out of bubble wrap around the FV. Then I dropped my thermometer! Airlock stopped bubbling after 5 days and on day 7 I dry hopped as per the kit instructions at sg 1022. Low and behold, the fermenting kicked of again for another 4 days. I kegged the brew on day 15 at sg 1008 and moved it into by airing cupboard for 7 day and the into my shed for another three weeks. From about 5 weeks after kickoff I have been drawing off 500 ml per day into a Grolsh type bottle and let it warm up to maybe 8 c before drinking. Very nice. I have citrus and gratefruit slightly sweet on initial taste leaving me with a bitter dry after taste. Absolutely no hint of yeast taste and only lacking a bit more carbonation to be perfect. My ale is by no means flat, but it does not have the zing that the St Peters had. It is ever so slightly cloudy but, probably as expected given the amount of dry hops. It is getting clearer by the day. I put this down to my cold shed temperature, but would welcome this forums comments. I have found all of your posts on this subject most helpful so thanks for that.
:)
:)