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re: Homebrewing: Extract to All-Grain

Posted on 10/12/11 at 1:15 pm to
Posted by Fratastic423
Baton Rouge
Member since Feb 2007
5990 posts
Posted on 10/12/11 at 1:15 pm to
I changed fairly quickly, but namely because I had a "mentor" brewer who had all of the equipment so i could ease into it. I know people who have never switched over and make phenomenal beer. Do not buy into the hype that all grain beer is inherently better than extract. All grain brewers are typically more experienced brewers than extract which leads people to believe that all grain beer is inherently better. Its not the process but the brewer.

You should be in no rush to change over, especially since you have had 2 out of 4 batches go bad on you, IMO. Its a lot of extra equipment and space and time that is required. While the ingredients tend to be cheaper per batch I don't think I have made that money back with all of the extras I have put into the brewery that are not necessary for extract.

I am brewing on Saturday. You are welcome to come see what goes into an all grain brew day.
Posted by BugAC
St. George
Member since Oct 2007
53076 posts
Posted on 10/12/11 at 1:17 pm to
quote:


I am brewing on Saturday. You are welcome to come see what goes into an all grain brew day.


Appreciate the offer, i'll be running back forth from new orleans saturday.

But yeah, i'm in no hurry to switch yet. I figure maybe in a year, i'll revisit the idea. Just curious what got people to switch over.
Posted by BottomlandBrew
Member since Aug 2010
27245 posts
Posted on 10/12/11 at 1:39 pm to
quote:

Fratastic423


Solid post.

quote:

Do not buy into the hype that all grain beer is inherently better than extract. All grain brewers are typically more experienced brewers than extract which leads people to believe that all grain beer is inherently better. Its not the process but the brewer.


This is it. I brewed for 2 1/2 years using extract before I made the switch to partial. I did that for 6 months to get used to the mashing process by using a 2 gallon cooler. Then I made the jump to all-grain. By the time I was going all-grain I had a pretty good grasp on things like yeast health, temperature control, cooling, basic mashing, specialty grain flavors, etc.

I invested in kegging and fermentation temperature control long before I switched to all-grain. I'd recommend looking at those two first. Kegging allowed me to pump out more beer and my fermentation temperature helped me nail down consistency in flavors - which then allowed me to experiment with different things.

Another thing to look in to is full boils. Not sure if you're doing that or not, but that can help out early on. Boiling 2.5 gallons on the stove is a lot different than 7 gallons on a propane burner. You can pick up a cheap 10 gallon pot and fit it with a ball valve. That equipment can be used with all-grain if and when you choose to step up.

My first couple all-grain batches were worse than my extract batches. It takes a few brews to get your process zeroed in.

One more thing to look in to is getting the freshest extract. Austinhomebrew liquid extract was always my favorite. They have such a high turn-around that it's almost always fresh. I was never a fan of dry extract.
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