Process and practice yield far better results than focus on a style upfront. So rather than think about how you're gonna nail that Belgian Style IPA clone, just start with a basic style and recipe and get brewing. The whole process goes something like this...
- get equipment
- decide on a simple recipe
- research process
- decide on YOUR process
- buy ingredients
- brew & ferment
- taste
- repeat incorporating any changes you think will help
- brew an Ale 'cause they don't require low fermentation temps and lagering
- pick a high flocculating yeast (beer clears faster) to shorten the fermentation
period (WLP002 English Ale is one of many you could choose). - everything that touches your wort AFTER the boil could infect it
- don't worry about a secondary fermentation
3 comments:
I would suggest that new brewers decide on a style to brew, and I agree it should be a fairly simple one, and then go out and try the commercial versions available so they have an idea in their head what the beer should taste like.
I always push the first beer we brewed... a Hefeweizen. It tastes great as an extract beer, it's relatively forgiving temperature-wise, it's something geeks and non-geeks alike tend to enjoy, and you don't have to worry about secondaries (or even clearing out for that matter!). The only problem is the yeast tends to get a little excited so I've had a couple people freak out when the lid to their bucket suddenly popped off with beer spraying all over the walls. Personally, I consider that a kind of baptism! ;-)
Now that's what I'm talkin' about. Real advice from real homebrewers.
Post a Comment