Home Brewing Help

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Adam8281

Platinum Member
May 28, 2003
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Yeah, I was able to get my kettle for like $5 used, just a huge soup pot, and I got my bottles for free - well, almost free. I live in MA where there is a $0.05 deposit on all bottles. I just went to the bottle redemption center and got 100 bottles for $5 (so I can have 2 batches at a time), bleached them out and scrubbed them like nobody's business, and I was good to go.
 

Adam8281

Platinum Member
May 28, 2003
2,181
0
76
A few of my favorite homebrew websites
Midwest Homebrewing-Good prices on recipe kits. Make sure to check out the "kit-of-the-month" clubs. You sign up for the club and every month they have a kit for a couple bucks off (usually costs around $21). The thing is, you can sign up for the club, order this months kit, and then "un-sign-up" for the club the next day so that you don't keep getting monthly kits. It's a good way to save a few bucks if you like what they're offering this month.
Austin Homebrew Supply-Free shipping on orders over $60 makes for some good deals here. This is good for ordering a couple recipe kits ahead of time, since usually shipping costs you $8-$10 from most sites when you order one kit at a time.
Double Springs Homebrew Supply-The website doesn't look like much, but I've ordered their recipe kits a few times, and they are very well priced. I've gotten a Winter Warmer from them, and also a Raspberry Amber Ale.
 
Jan 18, 2001
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Below is the FYI pm I send to people. You should be able to brew good quality beer for about for approx $25. If you get into all grain brewing, you can get down to about $15 for 2 cases (the standard 5 gallon batch makes a little more than 2 cases). Also, read Palmers how to website..

http://www.howtobrew.com/intro.html


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this is a pretty generic pm I send to people, the original recipient had a pretty big budget IMO ($200 IIRC), but you should still be able to get a sense of the basic EQ that is needed.

let me know if you have further questions...


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Look in your yellow pages under beer, for a local homebrewing store. Most large cities have at least 1. Buying local will let you customize your EQ a bit, but might cost you more. However, you will have a place to go to for advice and returns if necessary.


any brew kit that has:
a 7 gal primary fermentation bucket (plastic), lid, air lock.
a bottling bucket (has a little spigot...should not be used as a primary fermentation bucket because the spigot may slowly leak)
a 5 gal glass carboy, with air lock and stopper
a 6 or 7 glass carboy, with air lock and stopper
hoses
brushes for cleaning
a quality book (Papazani has a good one, as does Palmer). don't buy homebrewing for idiots.
sanitizer
long handled, strong spoon (not wood).

Throw in a couple of beer kits (Kolsch, IPA, Porter, Stout are all easily doable for a newb) too, so you can brew ASAP! these run about 20-30$ and brew 5 gallons each. They include extract, hops, yeast, and directions.

There are a few things that can really improve the experience of brewing. in the order of least to most expensive they are:

1. an autosiphon. only 10$ or so. great tool.
2. turkey fryer! (lowes has em for 30ish) they go on sale this time of year. (think they are about 30-50$)
--->lets you brew outside, avoiding nasty boil overs on the stove top
--->includes a 7 gal brew pot and nice thermometer (usually not included in brew kits (see above))
3. flip top bottles (avoid the hassle of capping) OR
4. mini draft system (little kegs that fit in the fridge and hold about 1.25 gallons) OR
5. a kegging system ($200), requires an extra fridge, but negates the cost and hassles of bottling.

there will be some things in the kit that you may NOT want such as regular bottles, caps, and a bottle capper. MAYBE you can trade up on these to flip tops.


http://www.midwestsupplies.com/
---> they have a decent kits


http://www.austinhomebrew.com/
----> decent kits, has one with a tapadraft minikeg system, and one with a kegging system


http://www.northernbrewer.com/starterkits.html
--->also has a kit with kegging eq included.
 
Jan 18, 2001
14,465
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If you're really on a budget then the essentials are:

7 gl food grade plastic bucket w/ lid and airlock (you don't do a secondary fermentation, unless you buy a second bucket) Glass is better because its impermeable to O2.
food grade tubing
bottles/caps/capper
a big pot (the bigger the better, min 12 quart - but you're almost gauranteed a boil over)
spoon

you can scrounge bottles, reuse those twist offs - just be careful not to bust them when capping.



thats really all you have to have.... the rest is for improved quality and convenience.
 

KarmaPolice

Diamond Member
Jun 24, 2004
3,066
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Thx for the help homebrew. I am going to see weds if I have time to drive an hour to the closest brew shop. I looked on many brew sites and it appears my area is lacking in that departmant.