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Home brew ales etc!


Lord Geordie
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I am thinking of buying myself a home brew setup for my Birthday and want to go the whole hog. I have seen the fermenting bin and the pressure barrel etc. I have found a few kits to start off with (norfolk ale "Wherry") sounds nice and a few others.

 

What I want to ask is about Bottling!

 

I have seen a pack of 6 brown glass bottles for sale for about £3.50 and the capping tool and caps for about £7 IIRC

 

What I want to know is are the tops of ALL beer bottles the same size such as (brown ale) or the bottles like Speckled hen and bishops finger and spitfire etc?????

 

I want to know as I can get a lot of these locally from people I know and if they are all the same it will save a bit of money on bottles.

 

I am also thinking of giving the wines a bash too as the GF likes a nice bottle of wine now and then.

 

Anyone brew their own ales etc and if so are there any nice ale kits to try?

 

Thanks

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Hi mate,

 

When I brewed wine over the Christmas I just got my empties from our local and gave them a wash and sterilised them before use, put them to one side for the next Easter batch. But am planning on brewing some ale for me and cider for the misses so keep me updated on how it goes :)

 

Cheers

 

Matty

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Pressure barrels, thats the way forward, that way you don`t have the problems with sediment in each and every bottle you just get a couple of pints in the barrel that are tainted. However if you don`t want to go down that route, try getting a hold of grolsch bottles and the like evn if the rubber tops are perished you can buy them cheaply.

Woodefords wherry is a great starting point, just don`t go down the route of cheap kits that require sugar to be added :no:

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LG

 

Yes, the bottle tops are all the same size. Make sure you go for brown bottles, as these give the beer a measure of protection against sunlight. Clear or green bottles do not, and you will end up with that "skunked" flavour that you often get in cheap lager.

 

H is right about the kits, the Woodefordes ones are superior to just about anything else out there. You can make decent enough beer with the other kits and kit enhancers, but even then the enhancer is 50% brewing sugar, which will lead to "thin" tasting beer and dreadful hangovers.

 

If you do decide eventually to get a pressure barrel (I have 4 :blush: ), take my advice and take the time to prep it before putting beer in it. Use very fint sandpaper to make sure the lip of the hole at the top is completely smooth. Unscrew the tap at the bottom and put some plumbers tape on the thread, and then refit it. Put vaseline on the o-ring in the lid, and on the threads of the cap. Nowadays they all come with a fitted inlet for adding gas. Get one of the gas cylinders and pressurise the empty barrel and leave it over night. If it still holds its pressure by morning, it is ready to put your beer in.

 

The other absolute neccessity when brewing is cleanliness. Everything that the beer is going to come into contact with (except your glass) MUST be sterilised with something like VWP.

 

Without wanting to sound like an alchy, I do lots of brewing. If you (or anybody else for that matter) needs any help or advice, feel free to pm me at any time.

 

Happy brewing :good:

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LG

 

Yes, the bottle tops are all the same size. Make sure you go for brown bottles, as these give the beer a measure of protection against sunlight. Clear or green bottles do not, and you will end up with that "skunked" flavour that you often get in cheap lager.

 

H is right about the kits, the Woodefordes ones are superior to just about anything else out there. You can make decent enough beer with the other kits and kit enhancers, but even then the enhancer is 50% brewing sugar, which will lead to "thin" tasting beer and dreadful hangovers.

 

If you do decide eventually to get a pressure barrel (I have 4 :blush: ), take my advice and take the time to prep it before putting beer in it. Use very fint sandpaper to make sure the lip of the hole at the top is completely smooth. Unscrew the tap at the bottom and put some plumbers tape on the thread, and then refit it. Put vaseline on the o-ring in the lid, and on the threads of the cap. Nowadays they all come with a fitted inlet for adding gas. Get one of the gas cylinders and pressurise the empty barrel and leave it over night. If it still holds its pressure by morning, it is ready to put your beer in.

 

The other absolute neccessity when brewing is cleanliness. Everything that the beer is going to come into contact with (except your glass) MUST be sterilised with something like VWP.

 

Without wanting to sound like an alchy, I do lots of brewing. If you (or anybody else for that matter) needs any help or advice, feel free to pm me at any time.

 

Happy brewing :good:

 

Cheers Zap (pun intended)

 

Went to visit a Micro Brewery today (friend of a friend) who makes ales etc and has a few on tap in some pubs. Had a few samples ;) Man some of it was amazing. I was doing a bit of snooping etc and he can get the alloy mini casks that hold about 8 pints IIRC and can get them for me for about £3.50 each if I decided to use a few for a get together.

 

I would LOVE to eventually make a Beer from scratch from the mash right through to the bottling.

 

Thanks again and IF I need any info I will give you a hollar :good:

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Cheers Zap (pun intended)

 

Went to visit a Micro Brewery today (friend of a friend) who makes ales etc and has a few on tap in some pubs. Had a few samples ;) Man some of it was amazing. I was doing a bit of snooping etc and he can get the alloy mini casks that hold about 8 pints IIRC and can get them for me for about £3.50 each if I decided to use a few for a get together.

 

I would LOVE to eventually make a Beer from scratch from the mash right through to the bottling.

 

Thanks again and IF I need any info I will give you a hollar :good:

 

No worries :good:

 

Making beer from grain looks very involved, but is in fact easy peasy. I can talk you through it when you decide to take the plunge. If you are good at making stuff you can build your own boiler, mashtun and wort chiller yourself for about £40.

 

All Grain brewing is also much cheaper than the kits. The initial outlay on equipment aside, I am probably paying about 20-25p per pint.

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