Nom Nom - Homebrew ...
 

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[Closed] Nom Nom - Homebrew beer

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It has definately come on in leaps and bounds. A work colleague has given me 4 bottles of some stuff he's made. It's good pub quality. I'd pay for this stuff no problem. It has that splendid nutty taste I associate with a nice dark beer and leaves that slightly sticky feeling on my lips that I always associate with black dog at the black dog pub in Belmont.

Clearly I need to talk to him about how he does it but he has said this is just a normal kit, none of that grain business. I'm just about to open my third bottle of the stuff, fantastic!

Any home brewers here? Tips appreciated. I tried my own a few times years ago. It was strong but vile, I was glad when I'd finished it all.


 
Posted : 27/03/2011 10:33 pm
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Our homebrew got somewhat out of control amongst our biking group. Last known brew was a 1000litres ! We seem to have gone semi-commercial, just looking into bottling and licenses etc. Does help one is a brewer but even so it started out as 4 lads doing 20litres of their fave brew !


 
Posted : 27/03/2011 10:47 pm
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I started just after Christmas and have got what I think is a fairly decent first keg. I used the saint peters IPA kit and it was dead easy.


 
Posted : 28/03/2011 9:14 am
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How did it turn out compared to the genuine article, anonymouse?
Thinking of ordering the St Peter's stuff myself.


 
Posted : 28/03/2011 10:06 am
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Buy ' The big book of Brewing' , and get to know your local home brew shop .
Spend a load of dosh on hydrometers and temperature controllers .
Learn how to brew / ferment / clean your kit, and get a load of bottles and a crowner .
Dont be a mug and think putting in double the sugar will make it twice as strong . It wont .
Learn how to wait , as good things come to those who wait.


 
Posted : 28/03/2011 10:07 am
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I couldn't really compare as although I've sampled official St Peter's stuff I've not tried the IPA. It was a little darker than I was expecting for an IPA (but that may simply be down to the type of sugar I used) but very tasty indeed.


 
Posted : 28/03/2011 11:10 am
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NZcol, can I join your club? 😀


 
Posted : 28/03/2011 11:51 am
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My missus got me a homebrew kit for my birthday. It's got the makings for a bitter and for a Pilsener - which type will be more forgiving for a complete beginner to work with?


 
Posted : 28/03/2011 12:06 pm
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@Squidlord - I'd try the bitter first; it'll be a bit more forgiving if you don't get the fermentation temperature right


 
Posted : 28/03/2011 12:08 pm
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Puts hand up. Started with kits but now do 50 litre batches from grain/hops on a brewery I put together in the garage. Got a rather good 4.8% pale ale just tapped 🙂


 
Posted : 28/03/2011 12:15 pm
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[b]stevehine[/b] - thanks!


 
Posted : 28/03/2011 12:39 pm