Kit Brands: Good / Bad Brands
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Kit Brands: Good / Bad Brands
I live in Melbourne, and want some good kits but not your ordinary run of the mill brands. My local HB store (Nth Melbs winemakers) doesn't have a particularly good range of beer kits... just wondering what some of the good harder to find kit brands are.
I've made Coopers and Black rock.
I've made Coopers and Black rock.
I've found ESB to be the gear. Costs a bit more but it is a 3kg kit instead of a 1.7 kg so you get around 4.5-5% with no added fermentables. I've only tried the bavarian so far but it was the gear. I've got a ESB stout with another week to go before I try it. Difficult wait. ESB also do 15 litre fresh worts. I haven't tried them yet. Has anyone?
Morgans:
Pilsener (Both types)
Blue Mountain Lager
Stockmans Draught
Morgans make a quality kit
Coopers Sparkling Ale 'Premium selection',just following the recipe on can makes a lovely malty beer.
Cheers
Boonie
Pilsener (Both types)
Blue Mountain Lager
Stockmans Draught
Morgans make a quality kit
Coopers Sparkling Ale 'Premium selection',just following the recipe on can makes a lovely malty beer.
Cheers
Boonie
A homebrew is like a fart, only the brewer thinks it's great.
Give me a flying headbutt.......
Give me a flying headbutt.......
Thomas Coopers Brewmaster Selection, available from HB outlets, but not supermarkets.
Followed by Coopers International Series (Bavarian Lager, Aust Pale Ale, etc), then Coopers Australian Original Series.
Malt Shovel appear to have dropped in quality. Once, but no longer, a fan.
ESB quite good, but seem to be in short supply. Seem to recall reading somewhere, quite recently, that production had been suspended/halted. Can anyone confirm/deny?
Local HB man is a fan of Muntons. Might take this path shortly, just to see where it leads.
Followed by Coopers International Series (Bavarian Lager, Aust Pale Ale, etc), then Coopers Australian Original Series.
Malt Shovel appear to have dropped in quality. Once, but no longer, a fan.
ESB quite good, but seem to be in short supply. Seem to recall reading somewhere, quite recently, that production had been suspended/halted. Can anyone confirm/deny?
Local HB man is a fan of Muntons. Might take this path shortly, just to see where it leads.
Cheers,
Pacman
Pacman
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Havent tried the ESB but have tried the ones Grain & Grape sell, 17Lt fresh wort kits, they are fantastic!!!!!!gibovski wrote:I've found ESB to be the gear. Costs a bit more but it is a 3kg kit instead of a 1.7 kg so you get around 4.5-5% with no added fermentables. I've only tried the bavarian so far but it was the gear. I've got a ESB stout with another week to go before I try it. Difficult wait. ESB also do 15 litre fresh worts. I haven't tried them yet. Has anyone?
By the time you pay postage you may as well buy a fresh wort from your local hbs. However i have yet to try a wetpac so maybe i should lol
Last edited by morgs on Wednesday Jun 13, 2007 8:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Purple monkey dishwasher!
Morgans and Muntons are the 2 best value for money beers.
Brewcarft and Beermakers are good.
Blackrock is okay, but given they also make Tooheys, and my last 2 were ordinary worries me.
Thomas Coopers is good, but does not deserve to be downgraded by placing it on a Supermarket shelf.
Coopers and Tooheys are overpriced. Buy homebrand instead.
ESB, very good brew, though I have only had one.
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Brewcarft and Beermakers are good.
Blackrock is okay, but given they also make Tooheys, and my last 2 were ordinary worries me.

Thomas Coopers is good, but does not deserve to be downgraded by placing it on a Supermarket shelf.



Coopers and Tooheys are overpriced. Buy homebrand instead.



ESB, very good brew, though I have only had one.
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I'd buy it if I saw it there. There is nothing wrong with the supermarket. HB shops are nearly always overpriced.hbg wrote: Thomas Coopers is good, but does not deserve to be downgraded by placing it on a Supermarket shelf.
Last edited by wildschwein on Friday Jun 15, 2007 11:48 am, edited 1 time in total.
I know a former butcher who has spent the last 5 or so years trying to find the best snags in Melbourne.
His conclusion, the Woolworths. No shit. And they're acutally made by the supermarket. Coopers just happen to resell their kits to the supermarkets. And personally, I hate the BrewCraft kit converters. I like to know what I am doing to each brew, so I can modify it later, not the mention their instructions which usually lead to the novice boiling the grain, and the crappy tannin taste. But thats a personally choice. My best brew is a Coopers, albeit with crystal, Cascade, and all malt. Pretty much all the Brands are identical IMHO, the only real difference is the bittering (how much and iso or real hops). What you add to the can is far more important, so long as it is to your taste. And even then some of the old prejudices are altering. Belgian Candy is really popular at the moment, but it is the same as invert sugar, which you can buy at the supermarket, and is very similar to Golden Syrup and Honey. And the only difference from sucrose is that it has been hydrolysed before the yeast can get to it, but the esters can still be produced (which are due primarily to the presence of fructose, which is still there in invert)
His conclusion, the Woolworths. No shit. And they're acutally made by the supermarket. Coopers just happen to resell their kits to the supermarkets. And personally, I hate the BrewCraft kit converters. I like to know what I am doing to each brew, so I can modify it later, not the mention their instructions which usually lead to the novice boiling the grain, and the crappy tannin taste. But thats a personally choice. My best brew is a Coopers, albeit with crystal, Cascade, and all malt. Pretty much all the Brands are identical IMHO, the only real difference is the bittering (how much and iso or real hops). What you add to the can is far more important, so long as it is to your taste. And even then some of the old prejudices are altering. Belgian Candy is really popular at the moment, but it is the same as invert sugar, which you can buy at the supermarket, and is very similar to Golden Syrup and Honey. And the only difference from sucrose is that it has been hydrolysed before the yeast can get to it, but the esters can still be produced (which are due primarily to the presence of fructose, which is still there in invert)
Last edited by 111222333 on Friday Jun 15, 2007 11:56 am, edited 1 time in total.
Keep it reel 
