Haha I read and re-read your thread probably a dozen times....then an urn popped up on ebay and put a spanner in the worksLord Raja Goomba I said:My 2 pot method FTW!!!!!!!@
Thanks mate for that. Sometimes you put it out there, for the sake of sharing knowledge but you wonder if it actually helps.zeggie said:Haha I read and re-read your thread probably a dozen times....then an urn popped up on ebay and put a spanner in the works
Great thread, shows how insanely cheap it is to get stuck into AG. Never go back to kits afterwards
Then get them to watch the thread vids.zeggie said:I was reading the thread before the vids were posted I think, as I don't remember them. Just watched them in that thread now and great stuff. Every newbie should watch.
All my mates quit at the kit and kilo stage (nearly myself included), I'm really glad I spent the bucks and got a 2nd hand fridge for temperature control went into AG. Now all my mates
want back in haha
and dehydrated veges came from fresh veges once.verysupple said:Getting back to the question, "All grain quality from extract beer?". Of course you can make "all grain quality" beer from extracts, how do you think the extract was made?
LRG would you tell Jamil that if you met him? It's too broad a statement surely. It really depends what you're trying to brew. Pale lager you might struggle, but I'd bet London to a brick nobody could pick my extract dunkelweizen in a tasting.Lord Raja Goomba I said:and dehydrated veges came from fresh veges once.
as I've said - some very good beers can be made with extract, but it isn't the same.
Yeah - I was thinking a couple of pages back, base malts are probably the one genuine and definite difference in quality. E.g. Maris Otter, Weyermann Pils/Vienna/Munich. We don't quite have the availability and turnover of quality extract that the Seppos do.carniebrew said:LRG would you tell Jamil that if you met him? It's too broad a statement surely. It really depends what you're trying to brew. Pale lager you might struggle, but I'd bet London to a brick nobody could pick my extract dunkelweizen in a tasting.
Yes, I would tell Jamil that.carniebrew said:LRG would you tell Jamil that if you met him? It's too broad a statement surely. It really depends what you're trying to brew. Pale lager you might struggle, but I'd bet London to a brick nobody could pick my extract dunkelweizen in a tasting.
I don't see how extract brewing is that different. It's not like all AG brewing techniques are the same. People always say you have more control over the final product with AG, but the level of control a brewer has varies hugely depending on their setup. i.e. a 3V HERMS system isn't the same as mashing in an Esky which isn't the same as BIAB.Lord Raja Goomba I said:and dehydrated veges came from fresh veges once.
as I've said - some very good beers can be made with extract, but it isn't the same.
Absolutely untrue on the stepping there. Your entire position is incorrect. Even the simplest of AG setups has vastly more control over the fermentability of wort than any extract method.verysupple said:Sure, you can't do a 5 step mash schedule or a continuous ramp with extract brewing but you can't with an Esky either.