Cloud Surfer
Well-Known Member
Seems most people probably learn the ropes with extract brewing before moving onto AG. I was wondering, once you make the jump, does anyone go back to the occasional extract brew?
That's reassuring that you haven't completely given up on extract. It kind of feels like the poor man's way to brew compared to AG, but I was amazed at how good my Belgium Triple turned out for my first go at brewing using extract. So I'll be happy to keep using extract plus some extra grains and hops for a while before shifting to AG.After 20+ years of extract brewing I invested in a Grainfather last year and am thoroughly enjoying the versatility but still alternate between AG brews and extract brews. I tend to do an AG once a month and then "hot-tub" a complimentary extract brew on bottling day to make the most of the residual flavour and live yeast, e.g. an AG Scotch Ale followed by a hot-tubbed Coopers ESB with various adjuncts and extra hops/spices. Apart from the cheaper cost (and far less time spent), the hot-tubbed extract brews also ferment really quickly on the live yeast and taste just as good as the more expensive AG brews.
All your research won't be lost, most of the techniques and elements will still be the same. There are some other considerations for all grain which will also need investigation however such as step mashing, PH & water adjustments.I only thought to ask this because I’m putting lots of research into extract recipes, while I fully know I’ll be switching over to AG eventually. I suddenly feel like I’m wasting the effort and should just jump into AG now and spend my time developing recipes there.
This is what I’m learning compared to extract. It’s a much bigger playground.With a single base malt AG you have the option of making lots of different worts, ranging from dry high alcohol to sweet and low alcohol, you can play around with the soluble protein, the Glucan content, you can affect the colour of the wort play around with how pH and mineral salts affect the beer....
All that before you start looking at what you can do with specialty malts.
Gives you a very big playground!
Mark
poor man brewing is slightly subjective......That's reassuring that you haven't completely given up on extract. It kind of feels like the poor man's way to brew compared to AG, but I was amazed at how good my Belgium Triple turned out for my first go at brewing using extract. So I'll be happy to keep using extract plus some extra grains and hops for a while before shifting to AG.
I just bought the Grainfather fermentor and chiller today. I’ll spend some time and brews sorting that out, then I’ll add the Grainfather AG system as well.poor man brewing is slightly subjective......
yes, it's a big investment to throw up to go to AG, but your cost per brew goes down, for starters. my across the board average carton (9L) on AG is currently $6.59 on 174 brews. (ingredients only). so maybe $17 for 23L. the quality is another level.
i went biab as a step-up, but personal experiences were things like splitting biab bags, low mash efficiencies, a lot of mess, and more labour intensive that AG. that's just my experience, not knocking it. a lot of people do it for years and love it. and gear is not prohibitively priced. but i didn't last long on biab.
put it this way - if somebody stole my AG gear, or it just completely died on me, would i go back to biab or a few kits to tide me over??
i wouldn't even brew until i got another AG setup.. and no set up is perfect. i'm on grainfather - great for an apartment, love the reverse chill etc, but no pumps and lines from mash to boil to fermenter, and you can't easily tinker with it or tweak it. so it's not for everybody. - so we can always whinge about some aspect.
there. that should confuse you even further
Thanks. I kind of got that, but it seemed he was describing it as a negative, where as I see it as a positive aspect of the Grainfather. Maybe it was lost in translation.He means not a 3 vessel system. He's doing single vessel brewing, so no pumping and transferring between steps.
Congrats on the sweet purchase. Please update us with pics and how it all goes!!
Why not? I like photos. Beer, systems, things we made.Thanks. I kind of got that, but it seemed he was describing it as a negative, where as I see it as a positive aspect of the Grainfather. Maybe it was lost in translation.
Do people post setup pics around here?
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