Aspiring brewer, new to forum

Howdy folks,

I have not as of yet brewed, but I am hoping to get started in the next month or two. I love great beer of most styles, although I have become somewhat turned off at the prevalence of crazy bitter and overhopped, mostly pale ales, that seem to be so popular in my area. Hard to beat a great pils, a fine creamy stout or porter…heck, I just like great beer :smiley:

I’m a craftsman in other disciplines, and I have really no interest in extract brewing, not knocking those that do, it’s just not suited for my temperament being as how I like to do things from scratch as far as possible. I’d like to jump right in to all-grain brewing, whether BIAB or more conventional methods I haven’t decided. One thing I’m curious about, is what beers are “easier” for a novice to brew, and what beers might be better left to a brewer with some seasoning under his belt? For the near future, I won’t be kegging, but will bottle my liquid treasure when the time comes. Anyhow, glad to be here and I look forward to learning from you folks

I would send a sample of your water to Ward Labs. Get your water report and brew the style that matches your water profile. When I started, I tried to brew yellow and hoppy. I got not good. I brewed black and creamy and it matched my tap perfectly.
That is my $.02

I should have started with welcome to the Club, glad you stopped by.

I’ve wondered about this very issue. Most of the answers I’ve received have been, “If your water tastes good, it’ll make good beer”, which kinda felt like a non-answer. Do you have a general rundown of what water types are best suited for certain beers? I keep tropical fish, and I’m pretty familiar with my local water chemistry.

Welcome BananaSlug!  You are in the right place.  (And hey everybody, who was worried about getting new blood in the hobby and the forum?) The main thing I would recommend is not so much a style as an approach.  Figure out what kind of equipment and process you can manage, simply, without tripping over yourself.  It doesn’t have to be perfect at first. Then pick a style you really enjoy and want to stick with for a while, and find a simple recipe.  Then brew that repeatedly until it comes out the same every time. Then you will know you are able to produce predictable results in your system.  You will have some idea of how changing x affects y.  That’s the time to start branching out to try new styles and consider refining your home brewery.  But whatever you do, make sure you’re having fun.  Don’t stress.  “Relax, don’t worry, have a homebrew!”

For all you need to know about water go to th e Bru’n Water website. The Water Knowledge page will school you, and when you want to go more advanced there’s a spreadsheet to help you adjust your Water chemistry.  But for now just learn what water does.

EDIT If you get your water from a municipal supply you can get an report from the water department that will be fairly representative.

Thanks! Gives me something to research. I’m familiar with our local water report, and according to my local fish store, it’s pretty accurate and representative of their own tests.

Welcome aboard.  Good advice above.  I’d simply add: whatever you decide, use a tried and true recipe out of the gate.  It doesn’t have to be complicated to produce a nice brew.

The Bru’water knowledge page. The Bru’water knowledge page. The Bru’water knowledge page.

I am one who was worried about new blood - so Welcome!  Brew the beers you like.  If they require some special touch, then apply it as the members here set it out.  Usually RO or relatively soft water works best for the pale styles.  pH is something to watch, but the water gurus can dial you in readily.  As I sit here tonight, I am comparing my Helles to Wehenstephaner Original and I prefer mine.  Not bragging, just saying what you can achieve with a bit of trial and retrial.  Cheers and best of luck to you.

Welcome aboard. I joined today also and it looks like I joined an hour or so earlier so I am no longer the Newbie!  :wink:

I have been brewing for almost 4 years now so still a bit of a brewing newbie compared to many here so looking forward to learning more about this great hobby.

I’ve done 3 vessel All Grain for most of that time and in the past year I’ve gone to single vessel BIAB to incorporate LODO techniques. I understand that LODO might be a bit taboo here but making my best beer ever since incorporating many of the recommended techniques.

I’d suggest starting with all grain recipe kits from a homebrew shop… either online or local.  That’s how I figured out what I could brew that tasted good with my tap water and my basic equipment.  Then when I got a recipe kit that turned out good, I’d use that as a basis to develop my own recipe.

Thanks for the welcome gents  8)

I won’t claim the knowledge or experience that many of the folks on this forum can, having only returned to the hobby/obsession a couple years ago, but I wouldn’t let my water profile dictate my brewing choices. If your water is wholly unacceptable for one beer style or another, you can always use store bought RO water, which is only a small additional expense. If your water is unacceptable for one style though, it probably isn’t really good for any other style.
  As far as sticking to only one style until you get it dialed in, for my first 10 batches I did 7 different types of beer, only 1 did I repeat. Of those 10 batches all were drinkable even though the 1st consisted mostly of 30 year old grain. The 1st 2 batches were not very good, but that was mostly a matter of developing a process that worked for me. That process has continued to adapt with experience and equipment upgrades. I do have train wrecks from time to time, I imagine that most people do.
  I brewed my 60th batch last week, probably 25 or 30 different types of beer, and not a single one even came close to matching any official style definition. And, though I do have several general recipes I repeat with some regularity, I’ve never tried to do an exact repeat of a previous beer. Even when I start out intending to do a copy, somewhere in the process I get a wild hare and throw in a change up.
  I personally couldn’t care less about matching style guidelines, and think some folks would enjoy brewing a lot more if they were more concerned with satisfying their pallets and enjoying the brewday, than winning competitions.
  Brew what you want, in a way you enjoy. When you make mistakes, accept them as part of life, and try to learn whatever you can from them.

In case it wasn’t clear, THIS^^^^^

If your starting out then rather than worry about your water profile I would think more about the fermentation temperature control. When I started out having an accurate and stable temperature during the fermentation gave me the biggest improvement to my finished beer.

Yeah, figured that was rather important :smiley: I’ve been placing my hi-lo- digital thermometer in various place around my place trying to sort that out.

It’s all important in its way, and you’ll figure out your own priorities as you go (and what to worry about is largely triage: what’s the thing you can most practically control that will give the most benefit?)  But learn water at the start, and save a lot of grief later.  Not that you have to dive into changing your water, just understand the effects it’s having.  Beer is 90% water, and brewing success is 90% water chemistry with a little  other chemistry, biology, physics, engineering and art rounding it out! And don’t forget the fun.

Stouts and porters are good beers to start with.  The inevitable mistakes are less apparent in beers with lots of flavor to hide behind.

Welcome aboard.

OTOH you could start with something like a pale ale and identify problems up front rather than go from stout to a blonde and wonder what’s up? Just a thought.  I’d start with the simplest, most basic kit the shop has. If you can execute that to your satisfaction, you can take on anything!