Author Archives: Home Brewing Kits
Home Brewing Equipment Cleaning and Sterilization
Cleaning and sanitizing home brewing equipment is the most important and often most neglected step in the brewing process. If the brewing equipment is not cleaned and sanitized properly it can ruin the batch. You put hours of work into your beer, so why take a risk? Cleaning and sanitizing is easy and quick, and … Continue reading
Home Brewing Kit Glass Carboy Advantages
My last post discussed plastic primary fermenter options and their advantages and disadvantages. Plastic Ale Pails are cheap, easy to carry (handle), and they do a good job of shielding your brew from the sun. The next step up from a plastic Ale Pail would be a Glass Carboy. Glass Garboy Advantages: Visibility (watch the fermentation … Continue reading
Plastic Primary Fermenter Options for Home Brewing
Fermentation takes around two weeks to complete, and could take significantly longer depending on what style of beer you are making. The wort (unfinished beer) stays in the primary fermenter or carboy for this amount of time. It’s important that you choose the right primary fermenter or carboy, as your wort will be stored there … Continue reading
Craft Beer Club
Nothing beats beer that your brew yourself, but craft beer comes pretty darn close. Craft beer is traditionally brewed beer made by a small independent brewer. They use the same process as you would at home, which results in high quality unique beer. Most local stores wont carry a good selection of craft beers, and beer made … Continue reading
Beginners Home Brewing Kit
I found a new Home Brewing Kit for beginners that has a higher capacity than some of the compact starter kits mentioned in previous posts. The Beginners Home Brewing Kit contains all the basic equipment that you need to start brewing, but it does not contain the ingredients. I started out on a similar system, … Continue reading
Bottling Home Brewed Beer
There are two options for storing and carbonating your beer. This first option is bottling your beer, and the second option is kegging your beer. Most home brewing kits use plastic or glass bottles to naturally carbonate your beer, and I will be explaining that process in this article. If you keg your beer you would … Continue reading