Topics: 1. How is beer made? 2. How do I start homebrewing? 3. What equipment do I need? 4. What is a hydrometer? 5. What is a wort chiller? 6. What are hot/cold break? 7. Recommended books. 8. Slow starting fermentation. 9. Grain/Extract conversion. 10. Hops and bitterness. 11. Dry hopping. 12. What is Lovibond? 13. What is Wyeast (liquid yeast)? 14. Yeast starters. 15. Mail order. 16. Homebrew clubs. 17. AHA/Zymurgy. Bibliography. ---------------- 1. Q: How is beer made? A: Beer is made from malt, water, hops, and yeast. The malt and water are brought to a boil, hops are added, the "wort" (unfermented beer) is cooled, and yeast is added to cause fermentation. Other ingredients are common in brewing, such as fruit, spices, grains other than the standard barley (such as wheat, rye, and oats), honey, sugar, and anything else that you'd consider ingesting. ---------------- 2. Q: I'm interested in brewing my own beer. How do I start? A: There are specialty shops all over the country that sell ingredients and equipment for making beer and wine at home. Check your yellow pages under "Beer" or "Wine" for homebrewing or home winemaking shops. If you can't find a shop locally, many shops do mail order (more on mail order later). ---------------- 3. Q: What equipment do I need to get started? A: Basic equipment includes a kettle for boiling the wort, a fermentation vessel of some kind -- glass carboys (5 gallon bottled water bottles) and food-grade plastic buckets are popular -- siphon hose for bottling, bottles, and a bottle capper and caps. Most shops sell "starter kits", which include essential equipment (and sometimes some not-so-essential equipment), ingredients for your first batch, and a book. Prices vary, $60-70 U.S. is common. ---------------- 4. Q: What is a hydrometer? How is it used? What is "specific gravity"? A: A hydrometer measures the weight of a liquid relative to the same volume of water (i.e., relative deisities). In brewing, much of this excess weight is expected to be from fermentable and unfermentable malt sugars. Most hydrometers measure Specific Gravity (SG), which tells how many times heavier than water the liquid of interest is; for example, a 1.050 SG wort is 1.05 times heavier than an equal volume of water at 60 F. SG measurements are temperature dependent, and SG should be measured at 60 F., as water is SG 1.0 at 60 F. Hydrometers often come with a temperature conversion chart, but hydrometers often are not accurately calibrated, so that water at 60F will not read 1.0. An easy way to take SG readings with a hydrometer is to measure at room temperature, and then measure water at room temperature and take the difference. Some abbreviations commonly used in homebrewing relating to specific gravity: OG, Original (wort specific) Gravity; FG or TG, Final or Terminal Gravity (when the beer is finished fermenting). ---------------- 5. Q: What is a wort chiller? How/why is it used? A: A wort chiller is a device used to quickly cool boiling wort to yeast pitching temperatures. Two common constructions are the immersion chiller and the counterflow chiller. The immersion chiller consists of a coil of copper tubing that is immersed in the wort, and cold water is run through the tubing. Counterflow designs usually consist of copper tubing inside of a larger diameter plastic tubing; cold water runs through the plastic tubing in one direction, cooling wort runs through the copper tubing in the other direction. Using a chiller to quickly cool wort has several advantages over slow air cooling. You get your yeast pitched quickly, reducing the risk of infection; the time the wort spends at DMS* producing temperatures is reduced; and a quick chill promotes good cold break. * DMS is Dimethyl Sulfide, a malt by-product with an aroma described as similar to cooked corn. ---------------- 6. Q: What is hot break? What is cold break? A: Hot and cold break are terms used by homebrewers to describe the floculation of proteins and other materials during the boil (the hot break) and cooling (the cold break). This material tends to settle to the bottom of your kettle or fermenter, where it becomes part of the "trub". Sometimes the terms "hot break" and "cold break" will be used to refer to the activity ("I had a great cold break when I pumped ice water through my wort chiller"), while at other times the brewer may be referring to the actual matter ("The cold break settled to the bottom of my carboy"); if you're worried that you may not be understood, you can always specify whether you're talking about the occurance or the stuff. Usually it is understood from context. ---------------- 7. Q: Are there any good books for beginners? A: There are many books on homebrewing. Some popular beginner's books are "The New Complete Joy of Home Brewing" by Charlie Papazian, "The Complete Handbook of Home Brewing" by Dave Miller, and "Brewing Quality Beers" by Byron Burch. See the Bibliography section for publisher and ISBN information. ---------------- 8. Q: I brewed a batch of beer yesterday, pitched the yeast according to the instructions, and when I woke up this morning, nothing was happening. What's wrong? A: Probably nothing is wrong. There is a "lag phase" between the time the yeast is pitched and the time that vigorous fermentation begins. This time varies depending on quantity of yeast pitched, temperature of the wort, and other factors. A long lag time is not good, but try not to worry; give the wort 48 hours for fermentation to become obvious before jumping to any conclusions. ---------------- 9. Q: I'm an extract brewer, and have some all-grain recipes that I'd like to convert to extract. How do I do this? A: All fermentables (malt extract syrup, dry malt extract, grain malt, sugar, honey, etc.) cause an increase in the specific gravity of the solution when added to water. A common way to measure how much the specific gravity increases is the number of SG points of increase when a pound of the ingredient is added to one gallon of water. Most fermentables used for beer are in the range of 25-45 points per pound per gallon. Values for many of these ingredients may be found in the references mentioned in the Bibliography section. When substituting one fermentable for another, use the ratio of the specific gravity contributions of each ingredient to scale the one you will use to the amount that will provide the desired SG contribution. Example: You have an all-grain recipe that calls for 8# of Malted Barley, and you want to replace it with extract syrup. One of my references lists the SG contributions of these ingredients as approximately 30 points for the grain and 36 points for the syrup per pound of ingredient per gallon of water. You multiply the 8# of grain in the recipe by 30/36 to get 6 2/3 pounds of malt extract syrup. ---------------- 10. Q: Regarding hops, what are alpha acids? What is HBU? What is IBU? A: Alpha acids are bittering compounds found in hops that are extracted when hops are boiled with wort. The alpha acid "rating" on hops describes how much of the weight of the hop is made up of alpha acids. Hops with a higher alpha acid content will contribute more bitterness than a low alpha hop when using the same amount of hop. HBU stands for "Homebrew Bitterness Unit", which is a recipe unit for hops. It takes into account the alpha acid content of the hop, so that a recipe will call for a certain amount of HBU's rather than an amount specified in ounces. HBU is computed by multiplying the weight of hops in oz. by the alpha acid percentage of the hops; sum for all hop additions. For example, 1 oz of 7% alpha hops will have a HBU of 7. Note that volume is ignored in the HBU, therefore it is important to include the volume of the recipe, or express the hop additions in HBU per gallon (or HBU per 5 gallons) rather than just strictly HBU. IBU stands for "International Bittering Unit", and is a measure of the amount of bittering compounds in a particular volume of beer, rather than a recipe unit. However, the "Hops and Beer" special issue of Zymurgy (see Bibliography) presents a formula for estimating IBU, considering several variables -- alpha acid content, wort volume, wort gravity, and time in the boil. Another way to think of this is that HBU represents the "potential" for bittering beer (the bittering strength of the hops), while IBU represents "actual" bittering, and is a measure of the beer, not the hops. ---------------- 11. Q: What is "dry hopping"? How should I dry hop? A: Dry hopping is the practice of adding dry hops to beer at some time after the boil. The technique is used to increase hop aroma in the finished beer, as aromatic hop compounds are quickly lost when hops are boiled. Common practice is to add the hops to a secondary fermenter, or if kegging, to the keg from which the beer will be served. Dry hops added to a fermenter should be left in contact with the beer for at least a week or two. The consensus seems to be that the amount of alcohol present by the time fermenting beer is in secondary fermentation is sufficient to prevent bacteria and/or wild yeasts from "riding in" on the hops and contaminating the beer, so sanitizing of the dry hops is not deemed necessary. Either whole hops, plugs, or pellets may be used for dry hopping. ---------------- 12. Q: What are the differences between 20L, 40L, etc. crystal malts? More generally, what is Lovibond? A: For brewers, the Lovibond degree is a unit used to measure the color of malted barley and beer. Darker grains have a higher Lovibond measure, and contribute more color to brewed beer. Darker crystal malts (such as 60L, 80L, 120L, etc.) will provide more sweet flavor and more color than similar amounts of lighter (20L, 40L) crystal malt. Dave Miller's book (see Bibliography) provides a formula for very roughly predicting the color of finished beer in degrees L based on the grain that goes into making the beer. ---------------- 13. Q: What is "Wyeast"? How is Wyeast pronounced? What are the differences between liquid and dry yeast? A: "Wyeast" is a nickname for the Brewer's Choice line of liquid brewing yeasts from Logsdon's Wyeast Laboratories. There are more than a dozen varieties of ale and lager yeasts available from Wyeast. Many brewers that use Wyeast consider it to be of high quality, uncontaminated by bacteria. For a report on contaminants in liquid and dry yeasts available to homebrewers, see the "Yeast" special issue of Zymurgy. Good results can be obtained from either dry or liquid yeasts, especially for brewers that are willing to carefully home culture yeasts that they know to be pure and provide good results. The name Wyeast is pronounced like "Why-yeast", not "double-u yeast", and is the name that the local Native Americans had given to Mt. Hood in Oregon, which stands near the site of the Wyeast lab. ---------------- 14. Q: How do I make a yeast starter? A: The Wyeast package recommends making a 1.020 SG wort and pitching the active contents of the package into a sanitized bottle with an airlock to allow the quantity of active yeast cells to build up before pitching into a typical 5 gallon batch of wort. This "starter" wort is usually made from dry malt extract boiled with water at the rate of 2 tablespoons per 8 oz. cup of water. Some brewers like to throw in a couple of hop cones or pellets for their antiseptic qualities. When the starter is at high krauesen (the term is used loosely here, you often won't get a foamy head on your starter, look for visible, strong fermemtation) it's ready to pitch. Typical time for a starter is 24 hours. This technique is recommended for both dry and liquid yeasts. ---------------- 15. Q: What are some good mail order shops? A: "The Cat's Meow", a recipe book compiled from the Internet Homebrew Digest, contains a list of mail order homebrew supply shops. The list is contained in an appendix; note that all appendices were deleted for "Cat's Meow 2", so you need to get the original (not vol. 2) to get the mail order list. The book is available from the archive server noted in the HBD header. ---------------- 16. Q. Is there a homebrew club in ___________? A. Information on clubs can be obtained from the American Homebrewers Association (see next question for AHA address). In addition, several clubs that have members with e-mail access are listed in a database maintained by Scott Murphy. These members have offered to serve as contacts for their club. To find which clubs are listed or to become listed yourself, send e-mail to Scott (scott@gordian.com). ---------------- 17. Q: Who/what is/are the AHA and "Zymurgy"? A: AHA is the American Homebrewer's Association, and Zymurgy is the Association's magazine. Zymurgy is published quarterly, with an additional "special topic" issue each year, for a total of 5 issues per year. For more info: AHA PO Box 1679 Boulder, CO 80306-1679 (303) 447-0816 ---------------- Bibliography: _The New Complete Joy of Home Brewing_, Charlie Papazian. Avon Books, ISBN 0-380-76366-4 A light-hearted, easy to read book on homebrewing. Assumes no prior knowledge (good for beginners), gets into some more advanced topics. ---- _The Complete Handbook of Home Brewing_, Dave Miller. Garden Way Publishing, ISBN 0-88266-517-0 More serious than Papazian, gets a bit more technical on the more advanced topics, but suitable for the beginner. ---- _The Essentials of Beer Style_, Fred Eckhardt. ABIS, ISBN 0-9606302-7-9 A catalog of beer styles, with many commercial examples, with gravity, color, and bitterness information. An invaluable source of information for creation of new recipes or attempts to imitate specific commercial beers. ---- _The New World Guide to Beer_, Michael Jackson. Running Press, ISBN 0-89471-649-2 A book about beer rather than brewing. Lots of information on beer and brewing from around the world, detailed descriptions of beer styles. ---- Zymurgy "Yeast" and "Hops" special issues, available from the AHA.