don cherry
Member
in the opinion of this board what is the best lager kit on the market ,either tins ,pouch or wort.also any one tried 1 of these morgans heineken clone kits , any good ?
Hi Don,thanks mate , i guess that would be the next logical step in my brewing ,but sorry if i am being stupid ,so all i would need is some malt extract ,hops & water ,and away we go ?
Don,wow what a reply ,thanks for taking the time to do this ,1 more thing and i promise i will go away ,where did you find your first step by step guide/recipe to try this idea , i am keen to try this .i have an inkbird for the fridge by the way ,thanks again mate
@clarkejw makes some excellent points.I couldn't agree more with the above comments. I now brew all-grain, but for 30 years or so, it was kits, mainly Coopers Real Ale, and then Pale Ale, when it came out. Kit brews do a terrific job, whether one is just starting out, or it's just preference.
One thing I quickly found was that by adding a couple of extra ingredients, such as steeping some grain, and using brewing sugars, the quality of the brews increased enormously, and indeed as Nick says, if you use tinned brew kits with added hops, you are constrained somewhat stylistically.
But, you asked about a lager kit, and I had great success with Morgans Blue Mountain Lager, using a Safale Lager Yeast, and a brew enhancer. In fact, I made 50 litres for my son's wedding, which was kegged, and it ran out before the keg of commercial Coopers Pale. My one claim to brewing fame!
If Mark, (MHB) is reading this, he helped me with that, and many other brews, and may like to add some comments.
But, my rule was, if you buy a commercial tinned kit, the first thing you do is to open the lid, remove the yeast sachet, throw it away, and replace with a good style-specific yeast.
Haha, after saying throw it away, I must admit that I have a sandwich bag full of Coopers yeast sachets! I've used them in ginger beer, and I've made focaccia with them, which works surprisingly well.@clarkejw makes some excellent points.
I read an article that said that BY FAR, the yeast is the single ingredient which influences the end result the most. So while you could cut costs & quality on the malt, hops - they'd not have the impact getting the right yeast would. The assumption being that any yeast used is utilised in the correct manner e.g correct style of beer, temps, OG etc.
Coopers used to use the same yeast (which I believe was a very small 5g sizing) for all it's Original Series products. Some of the International and Thomas Coopers variations had style specific yeasts with them e.g Lager, Wheat specific. I believe Mauribrew were meant to be the source for these.
Though I've benerally always used 3rd party yeasts (though I did just use the Coopers generics via a starter for some ginger beer as I had nothing else onhand and felt it a decent fit for purpose) - I've always kept in case of an emergency or stuck ferment. Worst case scenario you can add to your 'boil' and it will provide yeast hulls, which are excellent nutrition for your chosen brew yeast.
I digress but I also believe the simple task of rehydrating your dried yeast should be near mandatory for brewers, as you're killing 30-50% of the viable cells by just sprinkling on top of your wort. Thats makes a massive difference in allowing the yeast to become the dominant organism in your brew in those first few days - which is where off flavours can develop from another competing bacteria/fungus etc.
Yes, it's a terrific and very easy to use tool.@don cherry have a look at Ianh's Kit and Extract spreadsheet - its not a bad too. Just enter your recipe and hop additions etc, then the Brew day tab will have step by step instructions on ho to do the mini boil for hop and any speccy grain additions you have.
https://aussiehomebrewer.com/threads/kit-and-extract-beer-spreadsheet.29655/
Enter your email address to join: