I have actually done one of these myself, think it was under £10.
Sturdy plastic bag type of kit.
Very easy to make, simple instructions.
Yeast 'welded' to the bottom of the plastic sachet.
I did deviate and used a medium spray malt as felt it would need all the help.
Brewed exactly as it said it would, left it for an extra week before kegging it, batch primed, but a few 'sample' bottles.
Overall, think it came out at 3.6ish% very drinkable, not the worst I've drunk, didn't have too much of the homebrew taste to it (But that may of been the malt)
The sample's went down well with my ale drinking colleagues, still got some left in the keg after about 2 months (several kegs and bottles, not that I'm avoiding it)
Wouldn't say it's changed too much since brewing, still keeps it's head all the way down the glass.
An ok beer, but I would probably pay that bit extra for a Coopers
Sturdy plastic bag type of kit.
Very easy to make, simple instructions.
Yeast 'welded' to the bottom of the plastic sachet.
I did deviate and used a medium spray malt as felt it would need all the help.
Brewed exactly as it said it would, left it for an extra week before kegging it, batch primed, but a few 'sample' bottles.
Overall, think it came out at 3.6ish% very drinkable, not the worst I've drunk, didn't have too much of the homebrew taste to it (But that may of been the malt)
The sample's went down well with my ale drinking colleagues, still got some left in the keg after about 2 months (several kegs and bottles, not that I'm avoiding it)
Wouldn't say it's changed too much since brewing, still keeps it's head all the way down the glass.
An ok beer, but I would probably pay that bit extra for a Coopers