So few, another Muntons kit through the 1020 mark!

The taste from the trial jar was nice but very bitter. More bitter than I expected, but it has a nice golden look to it!
Hopefully its going to be a nice summery drink once primed up.
Thanks
When I weigh up the cost of AG + my time at £20 per hour (if I was at work) + the payback for all the kit its not a cost effective way of brewing IMO.Zephiacus wrote: I'm taking a brief sabbatical from AG as my kit needs repairs, getting a kit again after 3 years or so reminded me how straightforward it is to make nice beer, currently debating whether to get another one and put off repairing my meligned gear....
Its not cost effective if you charge your own time, but that's missing the point IMHO.Geezah wrote:When I weigh up the cost of AG + my time at £20 per hour (if I was at work) + the payback for all the kit its not a cost effective way of brewing IMO.Zephiacus wrote: I'm taking a brief sabbatical from AG as my kit needs repairs, getting a kit again after 3 years or so reminded me how straightforward it is to make nice beer, currently debating whether to get another one and put off repairing my meligned gear....
I understand that you get to make good ales to your own taste, but the same can be achieved from kit adaption or extract brewing.
My Brother-in-Law has currently got this one conditioning, and he said its was quite bitter, but was getting nicer after a few weeks.Stomach wrote:I put this in the FV 10 days ago and its down to 1011 from 1040 Its been at 1011 over the last two nights! I will take another reading tomorrow and then keg and bottle if its the same.
So few, another Muntons kit through the 1020 mark!![]()
The taste from the trial jar was nice but very bitter. More bitter than I expected, but it has a nice golden look to it!
Hopefully its going to be a nice summery drink once primed up.
Thanks
It could be a St Peters thing, as we both know, the IPA had a very harsh initial taste but now its a very tasty drop after several months in the bottle!Monkeybrew wrote:My Brother-in-Law has currently got this one conditioning, and he said its was quite bitter, but was getting nicer after a few weeks.Stomach wrote:I put this in the FV 10 days ago and its down to 1011 from 1040 Its been at 1011 over the last two nights! I will take another reading tomorrow and then keg and bottle if its the same.
So few, another Muntons kit through the 1020 mark!![]()
The taste from the trial jar was nice but very bitter. More bitter than I expected, but it has a nice golden look to it!
Hopefully its going to be a nice summery drink once primed up.
Thanks
I think that the 1020 stick was a myth or a temporary blip, because I have never suffered it with any Muntons kit.
Is this kit a 36 pint/20L jobbie?
For me time is the big constraint with AG. With a very young family (soon to expand) work and other comitments kits are perfect for me at the moment. I think though with merticulous planning, I should be able to dip my toes into BIAB for the odd brew!Geezah wrote:When I weigh up the cost of AG + my time at £20 per hour (if I was at work) + the payback for all the kit its not a cost effective way of brewing IMO.Zephiacus wrote: I'm taking a brief sabbatical from AG as my kit needs repairs, getting a kit again after 3 years or so reminded me how straightforward it is to make nice beer, currently debating whether to get another one and put off repairing my meligned gear....
I understand that you get to make good ales to your own taste, but the same can be achieved from kit adaption or extract brewing.
I think that little hop powder sachet that comes in St Peters is pretty harsh TBH.Stomach wrote:It could be a St Peters thing, as we both know, the IPA had a very harsh initial taste but now its a very tasty drop after several months in the bottle!Monkeybrew wrote:My Brother-in-Law has currently got this one conditioning, and he said its was quite bitter, but was getting nicer after a few weeks.Stomach wrote:I put this in the FV 10 days ago and its down to 1011 from 1040 Its been at 1011 over the last two nights! I will take another reading tomorrow and then keg and bottle if its the same.
So few, another Muntons kit through the 1020 mark!![]()
The taste from the trial jar was nice but very bitter. More bitter than I expected, but it has a nice golden look to it!
Hopefully its going to be a nice summery drink once primed up.
Thanks
I think that the 1020 stick was a myth or a temporary blip, because I have never suffered it with any Muntons kit.
Is this kit a 36 pint/20L jobbie?
I hope this calms down a bit although its not unpleasant, just more bitter than I expected. And yes, its a 36pint kit. I think it would suit a hop addition pretty well if the bitterness stays there to balance out, perhaps by leaving the hop sachet out that comes with the kit.
I too have never had a Muntons 1020 stick either! And I have done 9 or 10 of the kits now.
Next St Peters I do, I may leave out the hop powder. Thats a pretty good idea to do a Brupaks with it!!Monkeybrew wrote:
I think that little hop powder sachet that comes in St Peters is pretty harsh TBH.
I've still got their Ruby Red kit under the stairs waiting patiently to be brewed, but I've already decided to leave the hop sachet out, and boil some Fuggles or Goldings for 10mins 'Brupak' style
jmc wrote:Its not cost effective if you charge your own time, but that's missing the point IMHO.Geezah wrote:When I weigh up the cost of AG + my time at £20 per hour (if I was at work) + the payback for all the kit its not a cost effective way of brewing IMO.Zephiacus wrote: I'm taking a brief sabbatical from AG as my kit needs repairs, getting a kit again after 3 years or so reminded me how straightforward it is to make nice beer, currently debating whether to get another one and put off repairing my meligned gear....
I understand that you get to make good ales to your own taste, but the same can be achieved from kit adaption or extract brewing.
How many hobbies do you cost that way? If you liked cooking would you cost your time when working out if a ready-meal was cheaper than cooking something you really liked?
I really enjoy formulating an AG recipe and then brewing at the weekend. It depends what you want to do. Just make reasonable beer at low cost or spend some enjoyable 'me' time brewing something unique that's more to your taste than most pub beer.