hello
hello
This is my third time around at home brewing, previous attempts last century were forced on me by a love of beer and shortage of money. This time around I'm just interested in making and drinking good beer. It looks like things have changed a bit over the years. This is probably a good thing because I recall the stuff we made before was pretty ordinary - we just bought Coopers kits and followed the instructions.
Any suggestions on what I should use for my first brew will be greatly appreciated.
regards
John
Any suggestions on what I should use for my first brew will be greatly appreciated.
regards
John
Howdy jd
I'm hearin ya....I went through the same thing.
My advice (FWIW) is to pick a style you like and do a search. There's heaps of info and recipes here. Pick something simple at first. Nothing wrong with Coopers but cane sugar is out now. Try a Coopers Bitter with BE2. that seems to be one of the easy ones that'll probably get you a good result.
Read the sticky about things that make HB better.
It won't hurt to get a book or two for a quick read as well. There's a thread here somewhere about good books.
Keep records too...that's something I never did until I started again recently and it's already paying dividends. I have my brew book close by most of the time. Flicking through when you have a good idea or see something here you want to try. My Wife rolls her eyes (she an expert eye-roller!) and says "Put yer f*&^ing book away".
Welcome and good luck. Let us know how you go.
E
I'm hearin ya....I went through the same thing.
My advice (FWIW) is to pick a style you like and do a search. There's heaps of info and recipes here. Pick something simple at first. Nothing wrong with Coopers but cane sugar is out now. Try a Coopers Bitter with BE2. that seems to be one of the easy ones that'll probably get you a good result.
Read the sticky about things that make HB better.
It won't hurt to get a book or two for a quick read as well. There's a thread here somewhere about good books.
Keep records too...that's something I never did until I started again recently and it's already paying dividends. I have my brew book close by most of the time. Flicking through when you have a good idea or see something here you want to try. My Wife rolls her eyes (she an expert eye-roller!) and says "Put yer f*&^ing book away".
Welcome and good luck. Let us know how you go.
E
All right, brain, you don't like me, and I don't like you, but just get me through this, and I can get back to killing you with beer. - H Simpson.
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JD,
This thread http://www.homebrewandbeer.com/forum/vi ... php?t=1966 is also worth a read. While it's titled "Simple things to make homebrew better" it contains heaps of useful tips for the novice to advanced brewer.
Cheers,
Oliver
This thread http://www.homebrewandbeer.com/forum/vi ... php?t=1966 is also worth a read. While it's titled "Simple things to make homebrew better" it contains heaps of useful tips for the novice to advanced brewer.
Cheers,
Oliver
Also, check out this site:
http://www.howtobrew.com/
Apart from this forum, THE most informative thing I've read so far!
Welcome aboard!
Steve
http://www.howtobrew.com/
Apart from this forum, THE most informative thing I've read so far!
Welcome aboard!
Steve
Steve no function beer well without
Thanks for the replies and links.
I've been dragging out the old gear I have. Might need to get a new fermenter. The ones I have are the old black ones - buggers of things to clean around the top edge and probably a bit small. I remember a lot of brews used to bubble up through the air lock. Would they be ok to use as a second container for racking?
Thankfully I've still got a few bottles left - about 300 roll top long necks, a heap of crownies and some grolsch. A lot of these are still full of the old brews - could be 10 to 15 years old. Cracked one the other day - still tastes like cr*p.
The nearest home brew shop is a couple of hours away. Anyone had good, bad or indifferent experience with ordering over the net?
jd
I've been dragging out the old gear I have. Might need to get a new fermenter. The ones I have are the old black ones - buggers of things to clean around the top edge and probably a bit small. I remember a lot of brews used to bubble up through the air lock. Would they be ok to use as a second container for racking?
Thankfully I've still got a few bottles left - about 300 roll top long necks, a heap of crownies and some grolsch. A lot of these are still full of the old brews - could be 10 to 15 years old. Cracked one the other day - still tastes like cr*p.
The nearest home brew shop is a couple of hours away. Anyone had good, bad or indifferent experience with ordering over the net?
jd
I've found http://www.countrybrewer.com.au/ to be good to deal with, prices and freight seem reasonable.jd wrote:The nearest home brew shop is a couple of hours away. Anyone had good, bad or indifferent experience with ordering over the net?
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I'm on the south coast too and I've found http://bmbrews.com.au well priced and fast with cheap delivery (free over $110)
Hi jd, Good to see you getting back into brewing, I use Marks home brew in Newcastle.
Great prices, very fresh ingredients and very informative/freindly.
If your brewing AG Marks your man. Around $3/kg for grains and 5c a gram for hops. Also stocks Wyeast!
. Maybe a bit far for you but Mark will cover half your freight bill. But if brewing k+k he has a great selection for you to try.
Great prices, very fresh ingredients and very informative/freindly.
If your brewing AG Marks your man. Around $3/kg for grains and 5c a gram for hops. Also stocks Wyeast!
