I don't use one for brewing but I use them at work. The gun-type ones vary in quality and, as you'd expect, accuracy. If you get a good quality Fluke or FLIR branded one I'd trust them on liquids. A Jaycar style unit... not so much.
They also vary in accuracy because they are reliant on an assumed emissivity. This will vary greatly and you will get bogus readings on reflective surfaces like stainless or chrome. For liquids and dull painted surfaces it's a different story, but you still need to set the emissivity.
For example, I attempted to measure the temp of a piece of conveyor at work. The Jaycar unit (colleague's) read 67°C, and the Fluke unit read 52-55°C. The ambient temp was 34°C and it was in the sunlight. I was able to touch and keep my hand on the belt, so it was probably under 50°C. A contact measurement of the belt showed it to be 41°C.
The cheaper units have a habit of going out of calibration over time, whereas the expensive units maintain accuracy for years. Standard stuff.
Once you know and set your emissivity and use it exclusively on liquids, I would trust one. Just be wary that they need to be configured for your application. If it doesn't have a user-set emissivity, I'd be very wary of purchasing it.