Hi all,
I was fortunate enough to be involved with brewing a one off brew in honour of the lions tour with my local brewery ("Brentwood brewing company" & "elephant school brewing company" - if you see their beers they are always absolutely superb and well worth a pint - IMHO) recently and it has definitely piqued my interest in brewing. I never realised just how scientific but also almost artful it could be creating the perfect pint. As a design engineer by trade, this plays to every part of my personality.
As a result, I have spent all of my time recently reading about home brewing and i think it's safe to say that I am absolutely hooked! This has lead to an issue though, I have managed to read so much that I am a little but muddled on what I need and what I don't need kit wise. I plan to start off with very simple kit brewing as this makes the most sense from an educational and monetary outlay view, however I do plan to move onto extract brewing after a handful of successful kit brews and then once I've become proficient in extract brewing I'd love to move on to BIAB and eventually (in many years time) full all grain brewing. So hopefully as you can see, this is a bit more than a passing fancy for me.
Now I've had a look at wilkinsons for some starter brewing gear (as there happens to be a rather large one up the road from me) and for an entire starters kit/a vaguely custom built set up it seems to be very good value. So I guess my main question is, what is absolutely vital to be able to produce a good first brew? I've read so many forums recently that I can barely discern what's opinion and what's fact!
Also, what is a pressure barrel? It looks like something I could quite happily stick my brew in and drink out of as if it was a polypin but it looks like it needs a CO2 canister or something, will this make the beer fizzy like a lager or still keep it flat like a prer ale? (I understand that due to the second fermentation process the will naturally be a certain amount of carbonation but I'm still unsure as to what exactly the effect of this will be?)
A massive thank you to anyone who has actually bothered to read this far down, and hopefully you are still intested enough to answer my probably mundane questions.
I look forward to hearing from you all!
Rich
I was fortunate enough to be involved with brewing a one off brew in honour of the lions tour with my local brewery ("Brentwood brewing company" & "elephant school brewing company" - if you see their beers they are always absolutely superb and well worth a pint - IMHO) recently and it has definitely piqued my interest in brewing. I never realised just how scientific but also almost artful it could be creating the perfect pint. As a design engineer by trade, this plays to every part of my personality.
As a result, I have spent all of my time recently reading about home brewing and i think it's safe to say that I am absolutely hooked! This has lead to an issue though, I have managed to read so much that I am a little but muddled on what I need and what I don't need kit wise. I plan to start off with very simple kit brewing as this makes the most sense from an educational and monetary outlay view, however I do plan to move onto extract brewing after a handful of successful kit brews and then once I've become proficient in extract brewing I'd love to move on to BIAB and eventually (in many years time) full all grain brewing. So hopefully as you can see, this is a bit more than a passing fancy for me.
Now I've had a look at wilkinsons for some starter brewing gear (as there happens to be a rather large one up the road from me) and for an entire starters kit/a vaguely custom built set up it seems to be very good value. So I guess my main question is, what is absolutely vital to be able to produce a good first brew? I've read so many forums recently that I can barely discern what's opinion and what's fact!
Also, what is a pressure barrel? It looks like something I could quite happily stick my brew in and drink out of as if it was a polypin but it looks like it needs a CO2 canister or something, will this make the beer fizzy like a lager or still keep it flat like a prer ale? (I understand that due to the second fermentation process the will naturally be a certain amount of carbonation but I'm still unsure as to what exactly the effect of this will be?)
A massive thank you to anyone who has actually bothered to read this far down, and hopefully you are still intested enough to answer my probably mundane questions.
I look forward to hearing from you all!
Rich