If you plan on making wine and beer, get the equipment kit for making wine then add the stuff for beer. Most of the main equipment is the same for beer and wine except a capper vs a corker, and 5 gallon carboy vs 6 gallon carboy. The only thing you'll need for beer that you don't use for wine is a brew pot, a 20 qt is a good starter. You use the same primary fermenter ( get the 7.9 gallon for wine and works for beer too) hydrometer, thermometer, spoon, racking equipment, brushes, etc.
Use K- meta for wine and Star San for beer for sanitizing. oh and of course wine bottles for wine and beer bottles for beer..lol
I admire Mr. Beer for introducing a whole lot of people to beer making at what seems like a good price, but in the long run if you decide to move on to component beer kits and whole grain, you have to start all over because they make it so nothing transfers along. the kits are expensive and only make a case of beer. Most beer ingredient kits and from scratch recipes are made for 5 gallon batches ( just over 2 cases) and come out cheaper per bottle than what Mr. Beer offers. Yes you can work with the cans of liquid malt and measure them out but that can become a PITA. Using Mr. Beer and even the Briess and Munton LME's you have a limited amount of beer styles you can make, going with more traditional ways of making beer it is unlimited.
No offence Pete, but a LME beer is not in the same category as a whole grain recipe. If that was the case the brewerys would be using LME instead of grain and hops.
That said, with wanting to make both beer and wine, go with the more traditional methods of beer making, ie; ingredient kits and grain kits, working into whole grain brewing and stay away from the Mr. Beer. No reason to have two completely different systems to make beverages that are made close to the same.
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