Basic Equipment to
Start Brewing Beer
By Gregory
McLaw
In order to begin brewing your own beer at home you will first need
to have a taste for good beer. If you enjoy drinking Bud, Coors or
Miller ad nausea you probably won't care much for homebrew. However,
if you have already acquired a taste for a variety of micro-brews
and enjoy trying new and different beers then you are a prime candidate
for brewing your own beer.
To get started making your own beer at home I recommend purchasing
a brew kit and one or more extract ingredient kits. You will also
need a pot that will allow you to boil 2 or 3 gallons of water (the
bigger the better), and enough beer bottles for 5 gallons (about 54
if they are 12 oz. each). The bottles should not be a twist top.
Virtually every local and Internet homebrew store sells kits that
do not have a gasket seal on the fermentation bucket. Since sanitation
is critical in home brewing makebeerathome.info recommends a fermentation
bucket that has a seal to help keep your beer from becoming contaminated.
About 90 percent of the kits sold on the internet and in local stores
use an inexpensive food grade type lid with no sealing gasket.
Get a kit that contains a 6.5 gallon primary fermenter, 6.5 gallon
bottling bucket with bottling spigot, 5 gallon Better Bottle PET secondary
carboy fermenter, instructions, C-Brite sanitizer, twin lever capper,
triple scale hydrometer, airlock, pre-drilled universal carboy stopper,
liquid crystal thermometer, siphon hose and shut-off clamp, Fermtech
auto siphon, bottle filler and a bottle brush.
One of the more difficult tasks in home brewing is transferring the
liquids. When making beer, you can't start a siphon with your mouth
due to the hazards of bacterial contamination. The auto-siphon solves
this problem completely. I was amazed how well this worked the first
time I used it. Just pull up then push down a couple of times and
the siphon starts. Also includes in this kit is a Better Bottle PET
Carboy for secondary fermentation, to produce clearer beers. This
carboy has less weight than glass, an equivalent performance, and
no chance of breaking. This kit is a great value for beginning brewers.
Pick out an extract kit of a beer that you would like to try. Read
these instructions and you are all ready to brew. Lastly, go to makebeerathome
for information on the brewing process.
Gregory McLaw is a regular contributor to www.makebeerathome.info
and enjoys brewing and drinking his own beer.
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