Post #5128 made 11 years ago
by Scott
Hi, my name is Scott, and I live in the small town of Jefferson, Oregon (USA).
My first beer was brewed back in college, December of 1993. A friend had shared a beer he made, and I thought, "if he can make it, so can I". Made just 5-6 batches over the next 3 years... Had decent success, but also had enough failures that...after wife, kids and busy career, decided to stop brewing my own beer until I had the time, energy and money to invest in Cornelius kegs. (Hated sanitizing bottles, and estimating corn sugar to add for bottling - never got it right). There are lots of good microbrews up here in Oregon so not brewing really was not a problem.
My son (17 in May) had become very interested in beer, wine and spirits, and wants to get into fermentation science. I got back into brewing about a year ago so that he could participate legally in the process. So far I have been very happy with the beers that we produced - MUCH better then the beers produced earlier - and so am looking to expand into all all grain brewing. It enables me (us) to make beer that is not common with breweries in my area. So far almost all of my beer has been produced from malt extract, although the batch before last I did a mini mash.
Doing research into how to best get into all green brewing. I did wonder why it's doing half of the mash from a bag (mini-mash) would work why wouldn't doing all of the mash by a bag work...? (Figured had to be a reason). Also the brewing day for me when doing an extract beer seems to run five or six hours by the time all the cleaning is done. I ran into some posts and online articles on BIAB and it looks like this is the best way to get into brewing all grain beer; easier, less equipment needed, less cleaning. I'm going to need to invest in more equipment to be able to do this (bigger pot, BIAB bag, and I want a 6.5 gal big mouth plastic fermentor). It really would be nice though before I make this investment in additional equipment to better do BIAB, to review what other home brewers are using.
It looks like this website has a a lot of information and I look forward to spending time going over it and learning a lot. Thanks!
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SVA Brewer With Over 50 Brews
From United States of America
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