Beer thread
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@Bovidae said in Beer thread:
not all of our group are beer drinkers so I really need a pub that serves more than just the standard pub food, and has decent craft beer.
Vultures Lane on Vulcan Lane is the best craft beer and pub grub place in the city. Their pies are next level.
That said, probably not your group's bag. If you want more varied (fancier?) food, maybe Brew On Quay (although their pricing was eye watering last time I was there)
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@Bovidae said in Beer thread:
Aucklanders, any recommendations for a craft beer pub that has a good selection of food as well? Preferably in or near the CBD.
Maybe head to @nzzp ’s place for some home brewed crafties and some [insert some meat] wrapped in [insert some other meat] smoked on the Joe for 37 hours?
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@voodoo said in Beer thread:
@Bovidae said in Beer thread:
Aucklanders, any recommendations for a craft beer pub that has a good selection of food as well? Preferably in or near the CBD.
Maybe head to @nzzp ’s place for some home brewed crafties and some [insert some meat] wrapped in [insert some other meat] smoked on the Joe for 37 hours?
errr. this is pretty much my life. If I wasn't worried about looking like this, I'd do more of it
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@nzzp said in Beer thread:
@voodoo said in Beer thread:
@Bovidae said in Beer thread:
Aucklanders, any recommendations for a craft beer pub that has a good selection of food as well? Preferably in or near the CBD.
Maybe head to @nzzp ’s place for some home brewed crafties and some [insert some meat] wrapped in [insert some other meat] smoked on the Joe for 37 hours?
errr. this is pretty much my life. If I wasn't worried about looking like this, I'd do more of it
One of the South Park guys is looking more and more like this.
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powdered beer? From Germany? I hesitate to think what this could taste like but I'm kind of keen to try it. Might be an option for packing for a long hike.
https://www.stuff.co.nz/life-style/food-drink/drinks/300818393/planning-to-go-dry-try-powdered-beer
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@nostrildamus said in Beer thread:
powdered beer? From Germany? I hesitate to think what this could taste like but I'm kind of keen to try it. Might be an option for packing for a long hike.
https://www.stuff.co.nz/life-style/food-drink/drinks/300818393/planning-to-go-dry-try-powdered-beer
The market would be huge if there was such a thing as 'just add water' (and it tasted good)
However if it was the equivalent of instant coffee....
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@RoninWC ( or anyone else who might know )
I got a brew kit for my birthday ( can’t believe I never got one earlier but never mind ).
That little beauty there. Very excited.
Gonna start with the Golden Lager that it came with ( I want to walk before I can run ) and have looked at YouTube vids. I’m pretty confident even I can’t fuck this up too much. The question I have is around the storage while it is fermenting……It says 18-20 degrees ideally. Whilst we’re having some unseasonably warm weather at the moment in Welly ( a high of 19 today, jeepers ! ) what would be the best way to maintain this ? The garage is always a bit warmer than the rest of the house but if it varies a bit is it an issue ?
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Hey @MN5 apologies for the slow response.
)
Awesome bday gift, welcome to the world of home brewing.
In terms of best place to brew, ideally you want it in an area where the temperature doesn't change much, if at all. Somewhere in the middle of the house or in the garage if you can keep the temperature more stable.
One tip, especially if it starts getting too cold, wrap the fermenter in old jackets or towels that will add some thermal protection.
My Fermzilla came with it's own jacket but I've also used a old beach towel around it to keep temps steady.
After the larger, I'd try an ale as those can stand a little more variation in temperature and try some different yeasts such as those out of the Lallemand range which are usually very easy to find and your Local Homebrew Shop (LHS).
Once you get a little more confident with the process and tools, you can look at doing Fresh Wort Kits (FWK) which are pretty foolproof as you just add yeast and hops as per recommendations on the box or even try using extracts, Dry Malt Extract (DME) over Liquid Malt Extract (LME) for me personally. You just use a prescribed amount of water heated up and you add the DME gradually until all is well dissolved. ( see
Enjoy and happy brewing! -
@RoninWC said in Beer thread:
Hey @MN5 apologies for the slow response.
)
Awesome bday gift, welcome to the world of home brewing.
In terms of best place to brew, ideally you want it in an area where the temperature doesn't change much, if at all. Somewhere in the middle of the house or in the garage if you can keep the temperature more stable.
One tip, especially if it starts getting too cold, wrap the fermenter in old jackets or towels that will add some thermal protection.
My Fermzilla came with it's own jacket but I've also used a old beach towel around it to keep temps steady.
After the larger, I'd try an ale as those can stand a little more variation in temperature and try some different yeasts such as those out of the Lallemand range which are usually very easy to find and your Local Homebrew Shop (LHS).
Once you get a little more confident with the process and tools, you can look at doing Fresh Wort Kits (FWK) which are pretty foolproof as you just add yeast and hops as per recommendations on the box or even try using extracts, Dry Malt Extract (DME) over Liquid Malt Extract (LME) for me personally. You just use a prescribed amount of water heated up and you add the DME gradually until all is well dissolved. ( see
Enjoy and happy brewing!It’s ok pal, I just assumed you were hunting out memes and would get back to me when ya could
First brew seems to be going ok so far, there was a mini cold snap midweek but luckily the bloke I’m doing it with decided to grab one of these….
So fingers crossed that has kept things pretty constant. We did have an electrician round midweek to install a heat pump so he had to turn the power off, it did drop to briefly to 16 degrees, that shouldn’t be an issue hopefully ?
We dry hopped over the weekend and due to do bottling mid week once we’ve done the SG reading.
I CANNOT wait to get good at this and brew some weird and wonderful beers ( chillis and coffee beans are going to be added, not to the same brew )
He wants to do a Stout but keeping the fermenter at over 26 degrees ( which is what you need apparently ) might be a problem at this time of year.
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Bit of advice needed.
Normally brew 20L from kits or grain with secondary fermentation inside a pressure keg. All good. However I've noticed people using & praising refrigerated beer dispensers which use store-bought 5L kegs of beer. See link.
I'm wondering if it's possible to re-use or get kegs which you can fill & pressurize yourself to use in these machines. Have looked online but pretty inconclusive answers - has anyone done this successfully?
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@Victor-Meldrew said in Beer thread:
Bit of advice needed.
Normally brew 20L from kits or grain with secondary fermentation inside a pressure keg. All good. However I've noticed people using & praising refrigerated beer dispensers which use store-bought 5L kegs of beer. See link.
I'm wondering if it's possible to re-use or get kegs which you can fill & pressurize yourself to use in these machines. Have looked online but pretty inconclusive answers - has anyone done this successfully?
Can’t offer any advice sorry but hopefully @RoninWC can. He’s the expert around here.
Happy to report my Golden Lager is a nice solid starting point. It was never going to be a “wow, that’s the most incredible beer I’ve ever tasted” brew but it was bloody refreshing and so satisfying to do myself.
This one is coming up next…..I need to get more bottles.
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Yeah, a decent beer does just fine for me. Def. not a beer connoisseur but making your own stuff is hugely satisfying.
A lot of the smaller breweries here are getting into the homebrew market and producing their own kits - this one's really nice
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@Victor-Meldrew said in Beer thread:
Yeah, a decent beer does just fine for me. Def. not a beer connoisseur but making your own stuff is hugely satisfying.
A lot of the smaller breweries here are getting into the homebrew market and producing their own kits - this one's really nice
Red Ale at 5.5% ? That sounds decent.
The one I did is only 4.4% but like I said it came with the kit so was a perfect one to test things out on. Given a few temperature fluctuations etc it might only be about 4.2% but I’m not trying to win any awards so thats fine.
Will definitely only look at doing 5.5% and above from now on though.
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@Victor-Meldrew said in Beer thread:
Bit of advice needed.
Normally brew 20L from kits or grain with secondary fermentation inside a pressure keg. All good. However I've noticed people using & praising refrigerated beer dispensers which use store-bought 5L kegs of beer. See link.
I'm wondering if it's possible to re-use or get kegs which you can fill & pressurize yourself to use in these machines. Have looked online but pretty inconclusive answers - has anyone done this successfully?
Don't know much about these, not seen one before and I'm not sure if they are in the Aus market.
First thing I noticed is that they use those use those "store kegs" which have a very different tap system and would assume that the specific draft dispenser would be set up to take only those kegs and tap/coupler which is kind of limiting as there isn't a huge range of those.
Personally, and to give yourself more options and better future proofed, I would use stainless steel corny kegs, 9.5 or 19l (https://www.kegland.com.au/products/9-5l-ball-lock-keg-premium-brand-new) which can be found second hand frequently (just make sure you change the O-rings) and get a decent small second hand fridge, take out the racks and use those to store and cool your beer. If you don't want to turn it into a kegerator, then to dispense your beer/seltzer/hop water/etc. use:
Either a picnic tap
I recently went to a mates place in Melbourne to have a boys weekend away timed to go to the Fèis Ìle - The Islay Whisky Show so I drove there and took a 19l and 9.5l keg of beer and seltzer. To serve, I just used the two tap styles above as shown in this picture.
The resulting pours from each of the kegs:
And if you decide you want to turn that fridge into a kegerator, all you need to do is to cut through the top to mount your font, taps and push the beer/liquid lines, a hole thru the back for your gas line, a decent regulator and a 6kg CO2 refillable bottle.
And then you would have something that looks like this:
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Hey, thanks for the info and the time you put into it.
I've found out that you can re-use the store-bought 5L kegs (or buy new ones) and use them in a refrigerated, cO2 cartridge-powered beer dispenser - becoming popular here apparently. You brew your beer in the normal way, do a light secondary fermentation in a pressure barrel, fill-up your 5L kegs, reseal with new bungs and pop in a cool place to store. The CO2 keeps the air out and they keep for 3-4 weeks or longer. You then use in your beer dispenser.
Like the 19L size though, and we do have an old mini-fridge going spare...
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@MN5 said in Beer thread:
@RoninWC said in Beer thread:
Hey @MN5 apologies for the slow response.
)
Awesome bday gift, welcome to the world of home brewing.
In terms of best place to brew, ideally you want it in an area where the temperature doesn't change much, if at all. Somewhere in the middle of the house or in the garage if you can keep the temperature more stable.
One tip, especially if it starts getting too cold, wrap the fermenter in old jackets or towels that will add some thermal protection.
My Fermzilla came with it's own jacket but I've also used a old beach towel around it to keep temps steady.
After the larger, I'd try an ale as those can stand a little more variation in temperature and try some different yeasts such as those out of the Lallemand range which are usually very easy to find and your Local Homebrew Shop (LHS).
Once you get a little more confident with the process and tools, you can look at doing Fresh Wort Kits (FWK) which are pretty foolproof as you just add yeast and hops as per recommendations on the box or even try using extracts, Dry Malt Extract (DME) over Liquid Malt Extract (LME) for me personally. You just use a prescribed amount of water heated up and you add the DME gradually until all is well dissolved. ( see
Enjoy and happy brewing!It’s ok pal, I just assumed you were hunting out memes and would get back to me when ya could
First brew seems to be going ok so far, there was a mini cold snap midweek but luckily the bloke I’m doing it with decided to grab one of these….
So fingers crossed that has kept things pretty constant. We did have an electrician round midweek to install a heat pump so he had to turn the power off, it did drop to briefly to 16 degrees, that shouldn’t be an issue hopefully ?
We dry hopped over the weekend and due to do bottling mid week once we’ve done the SG reading.
I CANNOT wait to get good at this and brew some weird and wonderful beers ( chillis and coffee beans are going to be added, not to the same brew )
He wants to do a Stout but keeping the fermenter at over 26 degrees ( which is what you need apparently ) might be a problem at this time of year.
@MN5 so where's the beer porn? Pics or it was never brewed