That's kind of like having your first **** and then asking 'why bother with women' ?
That's kind of like having your first **** and then asking 'why bother with women' ?
For much the same reason that you learn to cook from scratch when you could just reheat frozen dinners bought in a box.
I started on kits for the same reason as a lot of ppl i guess: cheap beer!
After a few of the Coopers kits I started steeping grains and dry hopping. Then I got sick of bottling, seriously that is the shittest thing to have to do, all the cleaning, fiddly crap etc. so I went out and bought a kegging setup, butchered the beer fridge and was pretty happy at that point until I started wanting to do beers other than ales.
This is I think where AG started to make its case pretty compelling. I remember doing a couple pilsners with extract (by this stage I had moved on from straight out K&k). I did everything by the book eg wyeast urquell, fermenting in the right range, secondary fermentation, conditioned for a few weeks etc.
It still had *that* flavour.
So I hit up my local Asian grocery store and got a cheapy 80L pot for about $50. Got some nylon and made a bag. Got a 4 ring burner from the camping store.
My first BIAB was an ale, missed most temps, spilled a heap of stuff and burnt myself a fair bit.
Bloody beautiful beer though! It was my worst AG but was still better than any of my extract/kit ales.
After a couple more brews I tried out the pilsner. From memory it was about 95% Bo pils and 5% wheat. Fermented at the right temp, secondary and conditioned etc.
It did not have *that* taste!!!
That was it for me, completely sold. Bought an esky, made a hlt out of an old fermenter and a kettle element and never looked back.
Since going AG ive spent more on this hobby than I originally intended to but then again my intentions are now different than they were. Now I'm more concerned about perfecting my regular brews, experimenting with other ingredients (fruit is awesome) and basically having a great time.
I'm brewing small 20l batches (ie 1 keg) so that I can brew more often and I've got my brew day down to 3hrs with my new rig.
So I guess that's why AG is the ****. Not knocking kits or extract but AG removes the limitations.
Better tasting beer, and the flexibility to do more.
Plus the feel of doing it more as a fully natural additive free beer.
The other big thing in improving brewing i reckon, is going to kegging.
That really changes home brew to craft beer if you are a patient brewer.
Every sip gives me a warm glow "I designed the recipe myself".
Every sip gives me a warm glow "I brewed that beer myself!".
Ever heard of this book? Natural Harvest
Simple Really. I moved to all grain for the chicks.
K&K groupies
View attachment 54211
All Grain Groupies
View attachment 54212
Your choice.
note - please dont take offence :huh:
Ever heard of this book? Natural Harvest
Simple Really. I moved to all grain for the chicks.
K&K groupies
View attachment 54211
All Grain Groupies
View attachment 54212
Your choice.
note - please dont take offence :huh:
No offence, but I'm not sure if I'd have enough flour to go round the big girls!!
http://meemoskitchen.blogspot.com.au/2007/...nal-recipe.htmlCmon, KFC? Who would try and clone that? That's just stupid talk. Everyone know's you can't clone the Colonel.
Better tasting beer, and the flexibility to do more.
Plus the feel of doing it more as a fully natural additive free beer.
The other big thing in improving brewing i reckon, is going to kegging.
That really changes home brew to craft beer if you are a patient brewer.
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