smurfe
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- Jun 20, 2005
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Yes, these kits make 6 gallons of beer. It does carbonate in the bottle if you do not keg. What you do is after the beer is done you rack it to your bottling bucket with the appropriate amount to priming (corn) sugar added. You bottle and cap and keep in a cool (not cold) place such as your basement. The sugar will restart the fermentation with the suspended yeasts and carbonate the beer. This can take a couple weeks or better. Sometimes a month or so.
When you cool the beer to drink it will cause the yeast to fall out and will leave a little layer of sediment in the bottom of the bottle. Simply pour and leave about the last half inch of beer in the bottle or you can drink it as well.
I see there are a few Stout lovers here. I am one myself. I have to ask what type of Stout is it you like. I know many like the Guinness Draught Stout. These kits are not going to produce a beer like that. It will be closer to the Guinness Extra Stout. There is quite a bit difference in the two. The Draught has the nitrogen widget in it to reproduce the pour of draft Guinness.
Of my next three batches I am going to brew, two of them will be Stouts. Next batch will be an American IPA. I am doing this one next as I am going to pitch it on the yeast cake of thebatch of Cream Ale I have going now. After that I am brewing a Dry Stout and then a Sweet Stout. The Dry Stout will be kegged on a nitrogen tap. The Sweet Stout will be bottled. I am going to force carbonate in a keg though and use the Beer Gun I have ordered to fill the bottles of carbonated beer.
When you cool the beer to drink it will cause the yeast to fall out and will leave a little layer of sediment in the bottom of the bottle. Simply pour and leave about the last half inch of beer in the bottle or you can drink it as well.
I see there are a few Stout lovers here. I am one myself. I have to ask what type of Stout is it you like. I know many like the Guinness Draught Stout. These kits are not going to produce a beer like that. It will be closer to the Guinness Extra Stout. There is quite a bit difference in the two. The Draught has the nitrogen widget in it to reproduce the pour of draft Guinness.
Of my next three batches I am going to brew, two of them will be Stouts. Next batch will be an American IPA. I am doing this one next as I am going to pitch it on the yeast cake of thebatch of Cream Ale I have going now. After that I am brewing a Dry Stout and then a Sweet Stout. The Dry Stout will be kegged on a nitrogen tap. The Sweet Stout will be bottled. I am going to force carbonate in a keg though and use the Beer Gun I have ordered to fill the bottles of carbonated beer.