Thursday 14 November 2013

Homebrewing to save money???

Although most people start out in this hobby to save money by brewing there own beer instead of buying it, nothing could be further from the truth.
You start out buying a cheap Coopers brew kit from a garage sale, buying some tins of extract from Coles and you make your first beer.
Once it's fermented and bottled and allowed to age for a few weeks the tasting day comes around. You may or may not invite some mates over to try your awesome beer, complete with MS publisher designed labels featuring your witty brewery name and even wittier beer name, "Michelle's Pale Ale", (Usually named after your spouse or a sibling.)

You pour the beer into a glass, looks ok if a little cloudy, but a nice head to it, take a small sip and bluhh...... That's the sound your mouth makes as you open it slightly and think, this isn't the most amazing awesomest beer in the world that I'm going to start a micro brewery with to rival the likes of SAB Miller or Lion Nathan. Your mates all take a sip and give you a strange look on their face as they try to hide the fact that your beer tastes like chilled cats urine. They tell you "Umm, yeh It tastes ok" or "It gets better  as you drink more". But they never seem to want anymore, ever. 
At this stage more than half of new home brewers give up and put their kits on eBay or sell it at a garage sale and the cycle continues.

For those that are left the journey begins. Reading books and home brew forums we learn that temperature control whilst fermenting will improve our beer. Buying better yeast, steeping grains and adding hops, so we buy temp controllers, liquid yeasts, hops and grains, and old fridges to control our fermentation temps. Then we want to improve our beer even more so we start doing all grain brewing. 

The stove top brew in a bag method is what most people start out in all grain brewing. A cheap $30 BigW pot, some Swiss voile made into a bag and a temperature probe is added to our increasing brewing equipment stock, along with a stainless ball valve fitted to our pot to make wort transfer easier.

Then we decide to go 2v 3v or 4v Herms so it's more vessels, more ball valves, stainless coils, march pumps, elements, an electric brew controller with pids and a fancy brew stand to put it all somewhere. Add to that a grain mill, Bulk grains, more temperate controllers, a stir plate for making yeast starters, conical flasks, jugs, buckets, kegs, a kegerator, co2 bottle and regulator..........the list continues and is virtually endless.

Just "some" of the equipment I have added to my brewery over the years.

Not to mention that you then start buying craft beer instead of cheap mega swill as your taste for real beer improves. And we all know that a carton of decent craft beer can be upwards of $60 a carton.
I've lost track of how much money I've spent on brew gear but at a guess somewhere around $600 for my 4v Herms system. However I've been lucky and have managed to score a lot of my equipment at a good price or free of charge. It's probably worth well over $1200 if I had to pay for it all in full.

But home brewing can be as cheap or as expensive as you make it. There are plenty of beers winning awards that are still brewed on a kitchen stovetop in the BigW 20 litre pot, using the BIAB (Brew in a bag method), and having a 3v or 4v brewing system doesn't make you automatically brew better beer.

There is light at the end of the tunnel though. Once your initial investment has been recouped, brewing craft beer is a lot cheaper than buying it and you will start to save some money.

As an example a carton of Matilda Bay Fat Yak from Dan Murphy's will cost you

$58.89 per carton
$15.90 per 6 pack
$4.09 per 330 ml bottle



To brew a 25 litre batch of the same beer cost me approximately $35.00 in grain hops and yeast. Let's allow an extra $5.00 for water and electricity usage on brew day and an extra $5.00 for incidentals. 
This may or may not be a picture of a 
Fat Yak clone I recently brewed.

So that's $45 for 25 litres or $1.80 per litre. Which works out to
$14.16 per carton
$3.54 per 6 pack
$.059 cents per stubbie.



That's a huge saving on buying the same beer and in most cases my own beer tastes a lot better than what I'm buying.

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