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Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider
Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider

A community dedicated to homebrewing beer, mead, wine, cider and everything in between. If it ferments, bring it over here.

Share recipes, ideas, ask for feedback or just advice.


Some starting points for beginners:

Introduction to Beer Brewing

A basic mead primer

Quick and diry guide to fermenting fruit - cider and wine

Brewing software


Members
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Posts
233
Active Today
18
Created
2 yr. ago
  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    Flemmy @lemm.ee

    First fermented dates honey mead of the season

    I'm so glad the fermentation succeeded the sample tastes like apple cider with a sour kiss. The smell is extremely sweet. The alcohol kicks 🤙

    I used the traditional honey mead ratios and added dried dates with yeast. Proper cleaning is the most important part.

  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    dragbone @discuss.tchncs.de

    Does lemon peel kill fermentation?

    I've been brewing lemonade with a ginger bug and water kefir for quite a while. But whenever I try to incorporate lemon peel it seems to completely halt fermentation. I have tried normal and organic lemons without success. Currently I have a small batch of kefir with lemon juice going. Half of the batch is with lemon peel and that half shows no sign of fermentation after 30 hours (I have already bottled the other half because it was ready). Did any of you have similar experiences? I would really like to include peel for the taste 🙃

    EDIT: Thanks for the many inputs! Summarizing the responses it seems like lemon peel doesn't inherently stop fermentation and the cause is more likely to be whatever pesticide the lemons were treated with. So I got myself a very expensive (supposedly) untreated lemon which I will use in my next brew (after washing it thoroughly) and continue from there.

  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    poleslav @lemmy.world

    All the berries

    Now that it’s no longer dreary winter I’m finally getting the motivation to do something that isn’t fly virtual aircraft every waking second of my day. I decided to make two wines, one that’s a mixed berry (blueberry, blackberry, strawberry, not sure what else it’s just the berry medley pack from aldi) and a strawberry banana. Sometimes no matter how good or experienced of a brewer you are you make dumb mistakes. Did I get annoyed when my strawberry banana starter foamed over and caused a small cleanup? Yes. Did I think to add a blowoff tube to the fermenter filled with it? No. Did I spend most of today mopping the ceiling? Yes. Originally I wanted to do a lemon brandy rather than strawberry banana, but lemons were stupidly expensive. The plan is for the mixed berry wine to be the girlfriend tax and the strawberry banana to be turned into a brandy for a camping trip I have going on next month.

  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    BlueÆther @no.lastname.nz

    Happy little bugs

    This is a Rewarewa mead started over the long weekend

    • 7.5kg honey
    • made to 20 L
    • fermaid at
    • champagne style ec1118 yeast
    • est to be a og of about 1.113
  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    chobeat @lemmy.ml
  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    tasankovasara @sopuli.xyz

    I made a killer wort :(

    SOLVED: I was stupid. One litre less water in the kettle meant my temperature probe wasn't touching the water and strike temperature ended up being higher than intended, which obviously obliterated the enzymes and no sugar was produced.

    First total failure of my homebrew journey, and I have no idea why... I was really looking forward to this brew, a pitch-black stout with smoked wheat, chocolate malt and black malt. For yeast, I was anticipating to try Alzymologist's speciality.

    However, it's been four days in the fermenter and I've pitched three yeasts – first the Alzymologist (made a starter), then my usual fresh yeast without a starter and for the last desperate attempt some dry wine yeast – I can only come to the conclusion that my wort is poison. Not a sliver of CO2 has been produced. First yeast did produce heat in the wort for a day, but no CO2. Tried heating the wort, agitating and all, but it remains dead.

    Some little changes in my process were made – 18 liters instead of 1

  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    thetreesaysbark @sh.itjust.works

    Adding flavours to extract.

    Hello Brewers!

    I am still a noob to this, but I want to brew my wife something that she'd like.

    I don't yet have the equipment to do an all grain, and I am reliant on extracts.

    I was wondering if anyone has experimented with adding flavour ingredients, like cherry for example, to an extract? If so, when and what have you added? And is this going to be an expensive process of trial and error?

  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    SpiderShoeCult @sopuli.xyz

    What's brewing? April 2025

    Hey everyone, time for the monthly post.

    What's everyone been up to? Any special spring/easter/your local flavour of holiday brews?

    Cheers!

  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    Flemmy @lemm.ee

    Hi I just started testing home fermenting to expand the hom cookbook. I have a few questions.

    The jar is filled with:

    • 1/5th dark bastard sugar, stirred;
    • 1/5th bread yeast and some sesame seeds;
    • 1 date for aroma;
    • clear water

    Set for a month now 1 week left and it is bubbling on the surface so the reaction has set. Can I consume this to test the results or should it be refrigerated first? What kind of tools other than glass jars with valves should you have to make fermenting better?

  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    MuteDog @lemmy.world

    Sahti Brewing Demo/Course

    I know a lot of members here are in Finland so I figured I'd share this event here (sorry for the FB link but that's all I've got). Mika Laitinen (of brewingnordic.com and author of Viking Age Brew) is giving a traditional sahti brewing demo/course on Saturday April 24

    Here's what he wrote on FB about it:

    I'm giving a course on brewing sahti and other ancient ales on Saturday, April 26. Bircalaiset organizes the course in Pirkkala and is also open to those who aren't members of this Iron Age society. It will be a practical one-day hands-on course where people brew their own sahti or ancient ale in small groups. Handling farmhouse yeast such as kveik is a special theme of this course. I have learned a lot of new things about these yeasts in 2024-2025, although I have used Norwegian and Lithuanian farmhouse yeasts since 2015. Of course, you'll also learn to brew a tasty high-gravity sahti and flavor it with juniper, hops, and other ancient beer herbs.

  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    Naich @lemmings.world

    Brewing with "High Voltage" yeast

    Brewing up an APA with WHC Labs High Voltage dry yeast. It's insanely quick - I put it in at 3pm and by 8pm there was CO2 coming out of the fermenter. 2 Days later and it's down to FG. That was fermenting at 30 C, which is as high as my fermenting fridge goes. You can ferment at up to 36 C.

    From brewing to keg within a week - what a world we live in!

  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    Martj9 @lemm.ee

    Some bitter again

    Hello

    I recently restarted beer brewing after a pause of some years. I like to drink and brew bitter, so I restarted from there. This in the picture is the second brew in my "second era", an e+g beer brewed in a 10 l fermenter (I don't want to manage bigger volumes).

    Recipe is: 1 kg dry light malt extract; 50 g crystal dark (ebc about 270); 20 g Challenger for 40 min; 15 g Challenger for 2 min; 10 g Challenger in dry hopping; Mangrove Jack's M36 yeast. ABV 4.2%, IBU about 34.

    I should change the 50 g crystal dark for, let's say, 60 g crystal medium. I'll think about it. In order to spend less I used a dual purpose hop. Maybe in the future I'll use some Target for the bittering, but for now I'm quite happy. I use a single fermenter, so the result is a bit opaque. I don't care so much about that, other than try to cool down the beer for a night before bottling.

    Also I would like to resume my production of porter and maybe try some barley wine. Since a friend beekeeper gave me some ho

  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    tasankovasara @sopuli.xyz

    Going to try birch sap sparkly wine

    Lemmitor @A_norny_mousse@feddit.org in this community tipped that if the process serves and luck is on one's side, fermented birch sap can be better than champagne. Right now is the time when sap can be collected, so I'm giving it a shot!

    The tree isn't terribly bothered, the tap hole is only a few millimeters deep. I only do one tap per tree.

    Plan is to empty these tap bottles off several trees once a day into an intermediate container, use a Campden tablet per container and keep the intermediates in the fridge until I have enough, five liters maybe? Then one liter yeast starter, possibly with some cane sugar to lend a little extra aroma and colour (the sap is clear). Ferment fingers crossed. Serve force carbonated. Wish mi luck :D

  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    thetreesaysbark @sh.itjust.works

    First ever homebrew!

    Came out not bad. But the starting temperature was a little high and it has a slight tangy flavour.

    I'm trying to find a way to better control the fermentation temperature on the cheap. Any tips appreciated!

    One question I do have... After leaving in the bottles for a couple of weeks I've noticed a white residue is settling on the bottom of the bottle. Is this normal? (Pic of sediment in comments)

  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    tasankovasara @sopuli.xyz

    Cheers to Finnish brew industry's strike

    ... great time to get a brew going :D Yes, Big Brew is getting struck by a week-long strike starting today. Sure enough I hope the workers will get what they are going for. I know what I'll be getting, this is the fourth run of the lemon + ginger recipe and it's guud:D

    I'm sharing this mostly to show my malt grind station ideas: making it operable by power drill (hand crank replaced with just a regular bolt) and having a vacuum cleaner positioned where the output falls so that it picks our the lightest dust. Helps with keeping the room clean as well as hopefully makes the beer a bit clearer. The hoover collects a fair bit of dust every run: I weighed it once and now adjust the amount of malt going into the grind up by 2 % to account for the lost dust: 1000 g -> 1020 g.

    The Simpsons Maris Otter Pale Ale & caramel malts and the Viking Munich Light will be joined by a small amount of smoked wheat. Viking Malt says that this stuff can be used just like regular pilsner malt, being active

  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    Skua @kbin.earth

    Comparing brewer's yeast and baker's yeast

    I brewed two rough versions of this sahti recipe over the winter, the only difference each time being the yeast that I used (and any mistakes that I made). The first batch used Mangrove Jacks M42 ale yeast, the second used a sourdough starter made over the course of two weeks with Bioreal fresh organic yeast and some basic bread flour. Each one was clarified with fungal chitosan, although I can't say I was particularly impressed with the results - it seems to have killed the ability to form a head without really clarifiying it much. Each also got a small amount of priming sugar in the bottle and at least a couple of weeks before drinking (save for a pint for me during the bottling process).

    Appearance: Basically identical.

    Process: The brewer's version fermented for two weeks, the baker's for one. I would have left it for the full two weeks, but it had clearly stopped any significant activity by that point.

    **

  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    thetreesaysbark @sh.itjust.works

    Coopers European Lager question

    I've just brewed my first batch ever. For my first time I went with the Cooper's European Lager kit.

    FG was stable for 3 days (due to some personal stuff I couldn't bottle it on day 2) and the FG matched the expected end ABV as advertised.

    The beer tasted pretty good on sampling before bottling.

    So far so good.

    One thing I am surprised by, however, is how dark this lager looks. Not sure if this will get lighter during the 2 weeks that it's suggested to leave it in the bottle, it's something that can happen to this different batches, or it's just how this beer looks?

    Thanks for any tips/advice anyone can offer :)

  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    SpiderShoeCult @sopuli.xyz

    What are you brewing? March 2025

    Hey folks, time for the monthly post again. What's everyone been up to?

    I've not been that active in my cleaning with a side effect of beer-making hobby lately, I am sad to report. But planning perhaps a California lager.

  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    nope @sopuli.xyz

    using regular agricultural barley for making malt

    Does anybody have experience with using regular barley used as animal feed for making malt on their own? i have an endless supply of the stuff from a friend that uses it as animal feed.

    I was wondering if i really need specialized malt or would regular barley make an OK beer. I'm mostly curious and I don't want to waste time on a malt that would definitely result in a bad beer, I'm new at homebrewing and it would take up my only fermenting pot until it finishes.

    any thoughts or suggestions? thanks!

  • Homebrewing - Beer, Mead, Wine, Cider @sopuli.xyz
    SpiderShoeCult @sopuli.xyz

    What are you brewing?

    What's everyone brewing?

    I've just bottled something. Went for the parameters in beersmith of a wee heavy. Came out pretty nice, pre-carbonation.