Supposedly morebeer has blackfriday deals, like this as a beginner's kit
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Does anyone homebrew?
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trent
Originally posted by rwh11385 View PostSo it's less complicated than bottling? How much trouble is it to get prepared for a tap?
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Originally posted by jflip2002 View PostHomebrew: Im not just an alcholic, Im also a cheap ass.
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Originally posted by trent View PostIf you have a kegerator already setup it takes 15 minutes. Bottling takes hours. Rack out of carboy into corny keg, push on co2 line and beer line, put in fridge and done.sigpic
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trent
Originally posted by TwoJ's View PostThe beer is better, and it's really not all that cheap. It's like $40 for the ingredients to make a little more than two cases of beer. Plus it takes the time and effort to do the process correctly.
Have you priced out good beer recently? You do realize 5 gallons of beer is 53 12oz beers, which is about 9 6 packs. The average price for a 6 pack is $8.00 around here. 8*9 is about $72.00. It takes me about 3 hours from start to finish to brew a batch. I drink a lot of beer, and this adds up to a lot of savings.
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Originally posted by TwoJ's View PostYes, I do realize that. I was just pointing out that it really isn't all that significant. So you save a little over $30, but have to buy equipment, run the fridge, and spend 3 hours; which is worth more than $30 to me.
The time is spent doing something that you enjoy. I consider that time well spent. If you think of it as work and don't enjoy the brewing process, don't do it.sigpic
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Originally posted by trent View PostIf you have a kegerator already setup it takes 15 minutes. Bottling takes hours. Rack out of carboy into corny keg, push on co2 line and beer line, put in fridge and done.
Probably just a starter kit now, then improve on my toys later.
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Time to update a bit. We bought a kit that came with the ingredients to do a pale ale. We also got two corny kegs, a 5 lb bottle of CO2 and a double gauge regulator with all of the appropriate lines and fittings. We'll have to find a fridge and a tower so we can serve it appropriately.
Here is the wort just before it boiled.
And here it is in the carboy. We really should have bought a wort chiller, this is taking far too long to cool. We've now even got it sitting in the snow. Ugh.
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I put the stainless steel pot with the wort into a sink filled with ice water. Put the pot in the sink (with drain plugged), fill up with ice and then add cold tap water. It cools the wort down fairly quickly (10-15 minutes). That works better than the snow because the water keeps constant contact with the metal pan so heat flow is maximized, whereas with the snow you will get a layer of air between the pan and the snow, limiting heat flow to the snow. I tried putting it outside in the snow when I lived in VT, it was super slow.sigpic
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