goodbull92 said:
I talked to my brother-in-law & he agreed with what you guys suggested. I ordered the morebeer starter kit & he is going to help get me going. I'm looking forward to joining these discussions with you all.
Its a science and an art. First you have to nail the science and then you can work on making better beer.
After you get the kit the #1 first issue you'll face is using the right water. Since you'll be doing extract, this is pretty easy. Just use RO water. Get 2 5 gallon water jugs and fill up at a Glacier or similar spot. We'll water may have all sorts of high concentrations. Municipal water is most likely treated with Chloromines, which is a stable form of chlorine which is used to sanitize the drinking water. While you may not be able to taste it, during fermentation the yeast will transform this into a medicinal or plastic flavor. It'll ruin your beer but it's the easiest flaw to avoid. If you have a home RO unit (not the fridge filtered water) that'll work as well.
The 2nd issue is managing fermentation temps. This can be a bit tricky depending on your budget or space. Ideally for ales you want it 65F to 68F. There is some leeway. The cheapest option is to put your FV in a big bucket and fill it with water to a level an inch below the wort line in your FV, then throw an old Tshirt around. The shirt will wick water up and it'll evap off. That will keep it cooler. Rotate frozen water bottles out to keep the water cool.
Rule of thumb: active fermentation is about 1 week. After the yeast is done farting, let it sit a second week to allow the yeast to reabsorb by products. Then you're ready to package.
Also out of the blue the AHA sent me a notice I'm now a Distinguished Certified judge. I need to prep and take the written exam to hit National.