My First Ever Brew

Hey all,

So I am absolutely new to the whole brewing thing.  I current have 3 different recipes I’m going to try over the next few weeks.  The first one, which is currently fermenting, is a German wheat beer.  This was my first batch ever and I’m excited for the outcome.  Here are some photos from the brewing yesterday:

I absolutely enjoyed myself.  For the most part everything went as I expected.  I look forward to bottling and tasting this round.  I did learn that I need (very much want) a copper or stainless wort chiller.  I also want a glass carboy or two.  And, instead of using re-usable synthetic hop bags, I’m just going to use single use hop bags.  Can’t wait to brew up the other recipes.

first welcome to the game! looks like you had a great time. lots of great resources on the forum to tap into with questions, so take advantage.

yep a wort chiller comes in handy and helps get the wort chilled quickly and ready to pitch the yeast.

Welcome, have fun, and good luck

Welcome !

Looks great-

Just to reassure you - beer ALWAYS looks darker in the carboy than it will in the glass.
Now is the time for patience.  You may think you made beer, but you didn’t  (HERESY!). You made a nice comfortable, sweet environment for the YEAST to make the beer.  However, yeast work on their own schedule, not yours.  Give them the time they need and they will reward you with great beer.

Good luck!

As Santoch said, give it the time it needs, not what the recipe says. Your best bet is to get the next batch going as soon as you have time and room to get a good supply going. The wort chiller is a great help. A lot of information and opinions here on the glass carboys: they allow you to see what’s going on; they can be more difficult to clean with small opening; they are less likely to harbor any badness if cleaned properly; they are a lot more fragile than plastic or stainless; when they do fail, they can be very dangerous to both you and your wort. I have a couple glass carboys, and buying more was one of the first additions I made to my set up, bu they now mostly sit unused, as I now mainly use buckets and my new stainless Vessel. Welcome to the obsession and get ready to enjoy the best beer you have ever made!

I have one 3 gallon and one 5 gallon glass. Both have been sitting for years. Over the years I have broken two and cut myself once. My cut was simply a slice on the palm and didn’t require stitches though it bleed like mad. I know two brewers that were less than lucky. One nearly bled out and has permanent nerve and tendon damage in his arm. The second was luckier as his wife was able to react quickly.

I don’t mean to make villains out of glass carboys, I just want to note the dangers.

That being said, I am solidly a better bottle user. When I do get around to swapping them out, I’m going spidel.

Thank you for all the great information and offers of assistance.  Quick question regarding my airlock.  Here’s a little video of what it looks like (about 1 hour ago):

This is approx. 40 hours of fermentation.  Is this to the point where I need to consider a blow off tube setup?  The brew I am doing does say in the instructions that it may or may not need a blow off tube.

Thanks!

You would use a blowoff if the krausen (foam on top of the beer) begins to get close to the airlock. If the krausen gets in the airlock, it could clog and make a nice mess.

I recommend using a blowoff for every brew. At least through primary fermentation. The moment the airlock clogs and your fermenting beer explodes all over the ceiling will more than likely ban you from home brewing beer… Unless, of course, you’re singke and live alone lol. I still wouldn’t roll the dice.

I watched the video. This really isn’t thst aggressive of a fermentation. I’ve had blowoff basins overflow.

Great, thanks again for the info guys.  I did look at some photos of exploding beers.  Does not look fun.  I was going to use a bottle of vodka and a tube running from the airlock hole in carboy, but I couldn’t get the airlock off. So I decided to leave and hope for the best.  I figure I have enough room (for now) in the carboy, but it’s definitely moving up.

I’m engaged, we own a house, and have a Siberian Husky (dog).  If the beer exploded my dog would freak out (then probably drink the beer) and my fiance would take what’s left of the beer and move it outside she said.  Then, of course, I’d have to clean it and listen to her yelling in my ear whilst cleaning.  Doesn’t sound fun…

Yep. That’s why my brewery is now in the garage.

Just use sanitizer. You’ll be spending a lot of money on vodka for every brew just for a blow off basin.

I wouldn’t waste a whole bottle of vodka for the blowoff tube. Mix up a small batch of sanitizer (star-san solution) and use that instead. Much less expensive and will work just as well.

But you wouldn’t be able to drink the remainders afterwards…

  • Niels

My blow offs look pretty foul and I wouldn’t think of drinking then.

I have the large container of StarSan which I can use as well, but the vodka has been in my freezer for 2 years.  It’s not being used lol.  It needs a use ;)  I’m not a vodka drinker.

Before I starting using oversized fermenters, I would just attach the blow off tube to the center post of the airlock, always worked for me, but YMMV

best of luck.
T

this works until the airlock plugs down inside the fermenter. You can help prevent that  by breaking out the little cross piece at the bottom of the airlock.

Just out of curiousity… How close were you to the target original gravity?