So I just watched a couple quick youtube videos, and it SEEMS so far like a beer kit is a lot less complicated than wine, and all you REALLY need is a primary bucket for fermenting, the cap, thermometer, hydrometer, siphon tube, and a few other things like corn sugar, etc....
The only other things I'd have to buy are a bottle caper, bottles (as if I don't drink enough beer
), and a separate bucket and siphon tube if I want?
Am I over simplifying this? Beer doesn't need to "bulk age" too, does it?
I made my first beer recently and I'm hooked, still going to concentrate on wine, but I'm going to do a new beer every few months.
Here's the differences:
#1 beer does not need to bulk age, I'm talking about Ales, don't start off with a Lager, as those cold ferment and you need a separate fridge for them, and they take considerably longer.
#2 Don't use k-meta, use star-san to sanitize the equipment for beer, beer infects more easily than wine
#3 For most ales, do 1 week in a primary, and then 1 week in a secondary, then bottle
#4 Keep the lid on tight in your primary, and under an airlock right away, dont leave the lid on loose, like you do for wine, and there should be minimal head space, although if you have an active fermentation you may want to add an over flow tube.
#5 beer can ferment colder than wine, IE 65 deg is better than 75 deg (depending on what yeast you use)
#6 If you don't have a wort chiller, have a sink full of ice to put your pot in, and have some gallons of water frozen in the freezer that you can cut the plastic off with a sanitized knife or scissors to put in the wort (don't put yeast in until your wort is below 80 deg).
#7 when ready to bottle after the 2 weeks of fermentation are done, you can use a primary buck with spout to fill the bottles, there is a hand bottle capper thats not too much, to get them carbonated you add sugar before you bottle, and that causes fermentation to start up in the bottle from the suspended yeast.
Home made beer and be drunk at room(cellar) temp, no need to refrigerate.
I've been going with the Midwest Supplies own brand of beer kits, and using the wyeast activator packs, and have had great success.
HTH