Baylinerchuck
Commander
- Joined
- Jul 29, 2016
- Messages
- 2,726
I started home brewing a few years ago and have really enjoyed the challenge and honestly the chemistry. I have always loved creating stuff with my hands, and bringing a same philosophy of independence to the dinner table by way of hunting, fishing, butchering and canning. Brewing beer just seemed like a natural progression.
I started out with a simple brewing kit from Northern Brewer that contained a kettle, a couple buckets, hoses, etc. It came with a boxed extract kit that was a pretty easy brown ale. After the 6 week wait for the bottles to carbonate, I was pretty much hooked.
I’ve learned a lot along the way, and have since graduated from the inclusive kits to designing my own extract beers. I moved away from bucket fermentation and racking in favor of a catalyst fermenter. I also stopped the arduous task of bottling, and now strictly keg with a CO2 infusion.
This is currently a blood orange IPA on day 4. The yeast is starting to slow a little. I am holding a glass of the finished blood orange IPA, which is brewed with blood orange purée, lemon zest, and orange peel. I use a fairly moderate dose of Citra and cascade hops.
I started out with a simple brewing kit from Northern Brewer that contained a kettle, a couple buckets, hoses, etc. It came with a boxed extract kit that was a pretty easy brown ale. After the 6 week wait for the bottles to carbonate, I was pretty much hooked.
I’ve learned a lot along the way, and have since graduated from the inclusive kits to designing my own extract beers. I moved away from bucket fermentation and racking in favor of a catalyst fermenter. I also stopped the arduous task of bottling, and now strictly keg with a CO2 infusion.
This is currently a blood orange IPA on day 4. The yeast is starting to slow a little. I am holding a glass of the finished blood orange IPA, which is brewed with blood orange purée, lemon zest, and orange peel. I use a fairly moderate dose of Citra and cascade hops.