Becoming a better brewer

Hello all, I have been extract brewing for about 5 years. Extract is what I do because of my living arrangement, condo with restrictions. My question, I have experimented with enhancing bought kits a little. What I would like is some resources to read or watch to get more knowledge on brewing. I have a couple books “Experimental Homebrewing” & “How To Brew - By John Palmer”. What I want to learn is things like why this one and not that one for hops. When to add hops and for how long. What this hop will do to my beer, making my own recipe. Things along these lines, without heading off and taking classes. ( which none are close to me anyway). I don’t want to open my own business or anything like that, just want become a better brewer. Looking online for material you get enough info on a book to get you to buy then find it’s not what you where after. I know there has to be something out there to help so I came here to ask the knowledgeable ones. All of you…

Thanks for taking time to help people like me.

Danny

I don’t have any advice on books, but if you have the time, a great way to discover things like hops and grain contribution, as well as yeast, is to do small batches. Get five or six one gallon fermentors(our host sells them-I’ve got several), buy a five gallon kit, split it up and brew five one gallon batches, changing hops and/or yeast with each batch. doing this over the period of a year or so would give you a good understanding of what does what. You could also buy specialty grains that only need to be steeped and interchange them as well. I do agree that you should read up on recipe making beforehand so that you have at least an idea of what you’re trying to do. I know the small batches would be time consuming, but nothing teaches like hands-on experience.

Best of luck. This stuff is really fun.

Ron

Here are some links I have on file:

http://www.brewersfriend.com/homebrew/recipe/calculator http://byo.com/resources/hops http://journal-of-agroalimentary.ro/adm ... 49-252.pdf http://www.brew365.com/hop_substitution_chart.php http://www.beeradvocate.com/beer/101/hops/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hop_varieties https://www.hopunion.com/hop-varieties/ http://specific%20gravity%201.048%20%20 ... ilization/ http://www.realbeer.com/hops/FAQ.html#units http://realbeer.com/hops/research.html

I hope some of this reading is helpful.

One other resource that’s been invaluable to me has been to reference the Beer Judge Certification Program website, :cheers:

All the stuff above is good advice. What I would add is experiment. Get away from kits and take some of the recipes and change them up. For example substitute or mix different grains( extract), change up the hops or yeast. Brew brew and brew some more. You know you can do small batch and partial boil all grain BIAB within your space limitations also.

+1 to experiment, and a way I do this is small batches BIAB in a small drink cooler, or gal. size batches. You have your own specific tastes that effect you only. So tasting different hops, grains, yeasts or combinations there of, have to be your own experimenting. Smaller and more frequent batches, plus keeping a good log and notes to refer to, are a way to progress in this hobby of ours.

I would like to thank everyone with the ideas, I hadn’t thought of any of them. I will look at the small batch ideas.
Thanks again
Danny

I do 10 gallon batches and I like to dry hop each keg with different hops. You can really learn a lot about hops this way even just adding .5 oz of a different hop to one keg will change the beer.

I’m amazed no one has suggested “Designing Great Beers” by Ray Daniels. That is the classic work for teaching how to create your own recipes so that you can make what you want. It sounds like this is exactly what you are looking for.

“Radical Brewing” by Randy Mosher is the book that really got me thinking in the recipe-creation mode. It isn’t as much of a tutorial like “Designing” or “How to Brew”, but it is a fun read and it really goes in the details of different ingredients and how they affect the finished beer. You’ll come out of it with a desire to try out a dozen different ingredients that you never thought of for brewing before, and figuring out ways to make them work.

In addition to those above, I’ve been impressed with Gordon Strong’s books: “Brewing Better Beer” and “Modern Homebrew Recipes.” The latter provides excellent taste/sensory and formulation notes along with each recipe. Good luck.

I have been brewing for about a year - currently 1 gallon extract batches.

+1 to S Wagner for suggesting BCJP information.

I also use “Brewing Classic Styles” by Palmer & Zainasheff. All the recipes are designed using extract malts. In combination with BCJP style guidelines, For me this has been a good way to learn about a beer style and that styles use of ingredients.

SMaSH Single Malt and Single Hop) and 3-2-1 (3 malts, 2 hops, 1 yeast) [http://www.homebrewtalk.com/new-frame-work-for-developing-recipes.html] are two approaches I use for creating custom recipes.

Along these lines …

has anyone tried this approach (Dry Hopped Bud Light

) for tasting lots of hops quickly?

No, but it sounds like a great experiment to try. I like the idea of a very neutral base beer to find all those aromas. Nothing else to get in the way.

Another bonus for small batches is that it opens the door to All Grain on standard kitchen equipment.
I can do a 3-gallon all grain on one of those flat glass type electric stoves. All indoors; No turkey frier required.

[quote=“rebuiltcellars”]I’m amazed no one has suggested “Designing Great Beers” by Ray Daniels. That is the classic work for teaching how to create your own recipes so that you can make what you want. It sounds like this is exactly what you are looking for.

“Radical Brewing” by Randy Mosher is the book that really got me thinking in the recipe-creation mode. It isn’t as much of a tutorial like “Designing” or “How to Brew”, but it is a fun read and it really goes in the details of different ingredients and how they affect the finished beer. You’ll come out of it with a desire to try out a dozen different ingredients that you never thought of for brewing before, and figuring out ways to make them work.[/quote]

This. At least on Designing Great Beers. Once you have the basics down, this book is indispensable.

IMO Radical Brewing is a little dated. While it does offer some good ideas to get creative juices flowing, some of the beers in it look outright gross, and IIRC, a lot of the information in there is based on dated brewing dogma. I would recommend Experimental Brewing by Denny and Drew over it by a mile.

Start all-grain brewing. BIAB is so easy and awesome, I actually went to it from a dedicated mash tun setup.

One thing I started doing early on is splitting wort. Make a batch as normal, split the wort into two fermenters and tweak just one variable (dry hoppping, yeast, etc.). You can also do 2 different boils on brew day with the same wort to do entirely different hopping schedules.

I also went through a phase where my only goal was to brew ‘boring’ beer. But brew it really well. I was a brewer that wanted to add a little of this, add a little of that, and essentially ‘kitchen sink’ beers early on. Being disciplined helped me dial in my process.

Send your beers to BJCP competitions for feedback. They will give you good, objective and helpful tips on how to improve your beer. This is critical in learning to make better beer IMO.

Finally, as others have suggested, sensory analysis is also indispensable. You cannot diagnose problems in your beer or in others without it. At a minimum, check out some online sensory programs (Billybrew is a good one from what I hear, particularly in your circumstance, where it needs to be virtual), but local BJCP events and certification are great steps to take. In my mind, sensory training is essential.

http://www.garagebrewers.com/champion-of-the-pint/

This comp is 3 hours from you. Go check it out in January and make a day of it. Try to steward so you can see the process.

I keep meaning to get Experimental Homebrewing; I’ve heard only good things about it…

It has been on my purchase list for a while, so I bought it (ebook: $10) over the weekend. I read the first six chapters and scanned the recipe chapters. It was a good purchase. I’m doing extract brewing for the next year - so the coverage of extract+grains process and extract+mini-mash process was useful to me. Almost all the recipes have extract and all-grain versions – this is also helpful to me. For me, it has lots of “food for thought” both in the extract brewing process and in the recipe creation process.

Once again thanks to all who have replied. I have some good ideas here to get me heading in the direction I was wanting.

Thanks
Danny