Difference between revisions of "Extract Brewing Simplified"

Homebrew Talk - Beer, Wine, Mead, & Cider Brewing Discussion Forum

Help Support Homebrew Talk - Beer, Wine, Mead, & Cider Brewing Discussion Forum:

(Detailed How To Pages)
Line 3: Line 3:
 
This guide is written for would be Extract brewers to see what is involved in a basic extract brewing session. It is not meant to be a tutorial but just an overview of what is involved in brewing a  good beer. In it's simplest form making an extract beer involves adding hopped extract to hot water, pouring into a fermenter, topping up with cold water and adding the yeast. Put an airlock on, wait 7-10 days. Bottle with a little sugar in each bottle, cap and wait 2 weeks. Your beer is then hopefully done and ready to drink. Will this give you good beer and the satisfaction of real brewing? Debatable. Lets look at a more satisfying involved method.
 
This guide is written for would be Extract brewers to see what is involved in a basic extract brewing session. It is not meant to be a tutorial but just an overview of what is involved in brewing a  good beer. In it's simplest form making an extract beer involves adding hopped extract to hot water, pouring into a fermenter, topping up with cold water and adding the yeast. Put an airlock on, wait 7-10 days. Bottle with a little sugar in each bottle, cap and wait 2 weeks. Your beer is then hopefully done and ready to drink. Will this give you good beer and the satisfaction of real brewing? Debatable. Lets look at a more satisfying involved method.
  
Lets assume that to make good extract beer you'll be be looking at one of the either steeping some speciality grains and using hops or doing a "mini mash" with hop additions.
+
Lets assume that to make good extract beer you'll be be looking at one of the either steeping some speciality grains and using hops or doing a Partial Mash with hop additions.
  
 
== Extract and Steeping ==
 
== Extract and Steeping ==

Revision as of 11:35, 13 March 2007

This guide is written for would be Extract brewers to see what is involved in a basic extract brewing session. It is not meant to be a tutorial but just an overview of what is involved in brewing a good beer. In it's simplest form making an extract beer involves adding hopped extract to hot water, pouring into a fermenter, topping up with cold water and adding the yeast. Put an airlock on, wait 7-10 days. Bottle with a little sugar in each bottle, cap and wait 2 weeks. Your beer is then hopefully done and ready to drink. Will this give you good beer and the satisfaction of real brewing? Debatable. Lets look at a more satisfying involved method.

Lets assume that to make good extract beer you'll be be looking at one of the either steeping some speciality grains and using hops or doing a Partial Mash with hop additions.

Extract and Steeping

Equipment

The minimum equipment require for the following method is:

Heat source (Stove/oven/propane burner)
stock pot (1 gallon minimum)
5 gallon fermenter
Airlock
Thermometer
Mixing spoon
Syphon tube
Bottles

Additional beneficial equipment

Hydrometer
2nd fermenter

Ingredients

The fermentables (sugars to be turned to alcohol) for the brew will come from the malt Extract, either DME or LME. Speciality grains are steeped mainly for colour and flavour properties and not to add fermentable sugars. Hops are added for bitterness, flavour and aroma.

Recipe

Most home brew extract kits are the add malt to water and pitch yeast variety. If you want to get a recipe for a better extract beer then there are multiple books and internet sources available with thousands of recipes. You can then purchase your ingredients in small amounts from most Home Brew Stores.

Basics Steps

  • Steeping the Grain.
  • Remove Grain
  • Add bittering hops
  • Boil
  • Add Flavour hops
  • Add Malt Extract
  • Add Aroma hops
  • cool
  • Add to fermenter
  • Top up water
  • Mix
  • Pitch yeast

Full Boil

This section is a stub.
Help make this wiki better and contribute some content.

Equipment

Ingredients

Basic steps

Mini Mash

Equipment

Ingredients

Basic steps

Detailed How To Pages

Extract and Steep

Partial Mash

Further Reading

Home brewing Video

Navigation

Back to

Top