Brewing a German Pils Beer At Home (Grain to Glass)

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 161

  • @3rwparks3
    @3rwparks3 3 месяца назад +1

    i am going to brew a German Pils this week. This is a great reference video. Nice brau haus.

  • @hectorguzman8435
    @hectorguzman8435 2 месяца назад +1

    I love your setup! I made a couple pilsners one German and one Czech with glass carboys, a converted deep freezer as a cooling chamber, pretty amateur setup of mine lol but boy 2.5 months later I had the best beer I can think I have ever tasted. Cheers!! 🍻

  • @bombbrew4119
    @bombbrew4119 2 года назад +10

    cleanest grain to glass video out! Love seeing the hole process through! Would love to see a video on just your cold side, like when to pull yeast, dry hopping, temp on glycol chiller and stuff! You know your stuff and would just love to see how you go about things, I have all Ss stuff and there is no one on youtube showing cold side technique. Thanks Ryan, your killing it dude!

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад +3

      Thanks so much man! Great idea. I'll plan out a video for that soon. Cheers man! 🍻

  • @grahamlawlorshomebrewrevie8227
    @grahamlawlorshomebrewrevie8227 Год назад +1

    Great video mate . That’s some system you have there god how clear is it . Welll done keep up the good work cheers 🍻

  • @mike2410
    @mike2410 9 месяцев назад +22

    'Make beer at home' with circa £10,000 worth of lab equipment

  • @Bullsbrew551
    @Bullsbrew551 2 года назад +1

    Very nice system. Just made a German Pilsner myself. Came out very good.

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад

      Thank you! It's been a fun system for sure. What'd your pils recipe look like?

    • @Bullsbrew551
      @Bullsbrew551 2 года назад

      @@ryanmichaelcarter 5.2%ABV. 39.8 IBU. 5.2 gallons. 9.6lbs Weyerman Pils Malt (95%). 7.2oz Weyerman Caraform (5%). Step mash: 146F for 20 min. 152F for 40 min. Batch sparge with 4 gallons of 170F water. 60 min. Boil. H. Mittelfrueh @ 60min. 30IBU, H.M. @15min. 10 IBU, H.M. @ 0min (1.25oz) 0 IBU. Water Chem. Ca: 50, mg: 0.4, Na: 6.1, S04: 57, CI: 58. (ppm). O.G. 1.049. F.G. 1.009. Yeast: Saflager 34/70. Fermented at 50 F raised towards end to 65F. Lagered at 35F for 4 weeks. Then bottled to 2.6 vols of carbonation.

  • @thomasmacpherson5236
    @thomasmacpherson5236 10 месяцев назад

    The point you make re the water quality is very interesting and very important (also very quick and shortly made during the video ) good quality spring water with no added chlorine must be used, very ingredient is important. Great video and very interesting and informative thanks

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  10 месяцев назад

      Thanks! Yea most water sources are perfectly fine for beer as long as there isn’t any chlorine. Yeast will get pretty much everything it needs from an all-malt wort, except zinc

  • @mutantryeff
    @mutantryeff Год назад

    I'd like to see a video on which commercial beers are using which hops - especially lagers and noble hops.

  • @craiglyons2687
    @craiglyons2687 3 месяца назад

    What a beautiful brewery!

  • @spinaltechnologies
    @spinaltechnologies Год назад +4

    Great work but I don’t think I can make this at home, ingredients and equipment looks at another level

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  Год назад +2

      Thanks 🍻 you will need a way to keep the tank cold for lagering but other than that you can use the same exact gear needed for a standard beer

  • @joshuapinter
    @joshuapinter 8 месяцев назад

    Dude, your setup is next level. It's brewing pron for sure. Great job.

  • @Artofdrink
    @Artofdrink 2 года назад

    With the temperature compensation probe that you have, you don't need to cool your sample to measure the pH. Nice setup.

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад

      Thank you my friend! It's best to always measure the pH of the mash at ROOM temperature. Measuring at high temps will shorten the life of the meter's probe. The meter does have temperature compensation, but this is for adjusting the pH for various temperatures measured relative to the temperature used during calibration. Hope that makes sense. Cheers!

  • @garyelderman1229
    @garyelderman1229 11 месяцев назад

    If nothing else, your crisp footage is great. And you'll answer questions from folks. Just subbed. Fun to brew with friends and vet them rolling with video content like yours

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  10 месяцев назад

      Thanks so much! I appreciate the support! 🍻

  • @BusinessBrief392
    @BusinessBrief392 Год назад

    This is home-brewing on a whole other level

  • @tonylamartina6729
    @tonylamartina6729 Год назад +1

    Great video. Straight to the point without a lot of filler speech. Really appreciate that a lot. Awesome setup too. Beer looks amazing. Look forward to more videos.

  • @MikeP350
    @MikeP350 Год назад

    Thats quite the brewery you have!! Very clean video as well, cheers 🍻

  • @IHCBosco
    @IHCBosco 2 года назад +1

    love the detail of the brewing process. I'm just about to start all-grain brewing (still working on getting full setup) and love the helpful tips. Keep these videos coming. Great stuff!

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад

      Thank you! That’s awesome. It’s a fun craft that is for sure. Let me know if there’s ever a specific process you’d like to see and I’ll try and include it in a future video 🍻

  • @TheMattMustain
    @TheMattMustain Год назад

    How am I just finding you?!?! Sometimes the RUclips algorithm is right on. Great vid and subbed. 🍻

  • @jimmybacon1868
    @jimmybacon1868 Год назад

    Cool video thank you sir! I personnaly think that 90 min is a bit too much, I used to do so but now I am doing 30 minutes boil and I did not notice any difference. I have hard that DMS level are low with modern malts these days... Anyway good video thank you!

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  Год назад

      Thank you! Yea you’re right, modern malt is typically very well modified and a long boil may not always be necessary

  • @jeffkastner6480
    @jeffkastner6480 9 месяцев назад

    Love what you do, very to the point. A lot of people use RO water s o it would be handy to know your additions. Wondering if your going to do a Czech pilsner or Helles any time soon. Cheers

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  9 месяцев назад

      Thanks so much! I typically don’t include the amount, but instead give the total PPM. Water chemistry is very advanced and best not to mess with if not using brewing software. It’s much better to use regular chlorine-free water in that case

  • @wd6358
    @wd6358 2 года назад +1

    Looks fabulous!

  • @paulbrodie6929
    @paulbrodie6929 Год назад

    Great video, one of my favourite styles and always good drinking, your attention to the finer details is great, thanks for a great video.

  • @jmsnystrom
    @jmsnystrom 2 года назад

    Nice soundstage!

  • @bulldog9708
    @bulldog9708 Год назад

    Great video and channel. Quite a complex process but it doesn’t need to be !

  • @TWillBeer
    @TWillBeer 2 года назад

    A great into to brewing video. I love how you go over every step of the process. Very well done!

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад

      Thanks so much! Let me know if there's ever a certain process you'd like to see. Cheers!

  • @ElementaryBrewingCo
    @ElementaryBrewingCo 2 года назад

    Ohhh man your brew set up is sweet!!!!

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад +2

      Thank you! It's been a fun one. I'm currently in the process of some upgrades so should have something cooler here soon!

  • @judassamurai2624
    @judassamurai2624 5 месяцев назад

    Awesome
    Step a step 🎉❤

  • @TombiggbeeLife
    @TombiggbeeLife Год назад

    Love the Info on making beer. Excellent process for sure. However, Yeah! you CAN make beer like this at home... if you have god only knows how much money this equipment costs. I Suppose the info here can be done in a more budget friendly way I guess. Great vid, slightly misleading title though. Thumbs up from this guy

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  Год назад +1

      Yup you’re exactly right- beer can be brewed at home significantly cheaper. My first setup was a Home Depot cooler and 5 gallon pot in my apartment kitchen. The expensive gear just makes it much more efficient and easier

  • @toddhanna7949
    @toddhanna7949 2 года назад

    Hi mate, just wanting to know a bit more about the reason behind transferring and the benefits of moving the brew from one fermenter to a second fermenter ?.
    Love your videos BTW so thanks for sharing your knowledge.

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад

      Hi Todd, the main goal is to get the beer off the yeast that has flocculated to the bottom. This layer can leach off-flavors into the beer if left in contact too long. The best process is to use a conical fermenter with a bottom drain so you can drop the cone without transferring the beer. But you can also move the beer to a secondary fermenter, leaving the flocculated yeast behind.

  • @nmoutlaw7396
    @nmoutlaw7396 2 года назад

    Awesome video!

  • @klecksklacks9555
    @klecksklacks9555 8 месяцев назад

    I am about to brew my 1st lager and your vid was extremely helpful, thanks for that. Which kind of Wifi / App Control did you use to change the temp settings of your ssbrewtech unitank? Thanks again, Sven

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  8 месяцев назад +1

      Awesome! I hope your brew goes well! I don’t have a wifi app for my controller.. it’s all manual

  • @SERVISONE
    @SERVISONE 8 месяцев назад

    Great video dude! When you add lactic acid to your water, what ph target are you shooting for? Does the ph change again after you add in the grains? Thanks for any info!

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  8 месяцев назад

      My goal is to adjust the water so that the mash pH falls around 5.2. The water pH will vary depending on the beer I’m brewing, but you can calculate that in your brewing software. And yea, the pH will rise to that 5.2 range once the grain is added

  • @exodo999
    @exodo999 Год назад

    I love your videos, I was wondering if you made the Beer system or did you buy the complete system?

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  Год назад +1

      Thank you! It’s a mix of different equipment/parts but the main set of kettles and pumps are included in Spike Brewing’s 15-gallon Tank Trio system. I have most of the other parts linked in my bio

    • @exodo999
      @exodo999 Год назад

      Awesome@@ryanmichaelcarter , this is really helpful! I will take a look to your bio, thanks again!

  • @andrevangijsel957
    @andrevangijsel957 2 года назад

    Can you make a more detailed video on your pipework / valve setup.Would be great.

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад +1

      Hey Andre, here is a link to my brewhouse tour video. I'm making some upgrades to my system so I'll be making a new one here soon.
      ruclips.net/video/j2qXLymoW88/видео.html

    • @andrevangijsel957
      @andrevangijsel957 2 года назад

      @@ryanmichaelcarter Yes I've seen that but that video is a bit short :).

  • @austinque9
    @austinque9 Год назад

    How much was your entire rig? Everthing! That beer looks perfect!!

  • @aprilhernandez3060
    @aprilhernandez3060 2 года назад

    Ryan great content! Love the vids and your system setup. Keep up the good work.

  • @Digger72
    @Digger72 Год назад

    Good video thanks

  • @MinhaCervaMinhaVida
    @MinhaCervaMinhaVida 2 года назад +1

    Very good 🍻🍻🍻

  • @Drew206619
    @Drew206619 7 месяцев назад +1

    How much did that system cost?

  • @garyelderman1229
    @garyelderman1229 9 месяцев назад

    Can you please add brewing water adjustments in grams for us not yet familiar with PPM?

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  9 месяцев назад +1

      It’s really important to do it based on total PPM, which is all calculated in brewing software. Without that, it’s best not attempt to adjust water chemistry because every water source is different. Adjusting to the correct PPM will determine the amounts

    • @garyelderman1229
      @garyelderman1229 9 месяцев назад

      I will start with RO water. And thanks for the reply.
      @@ryanmichaelcarter

  • @rob1399
    @rob1399 Год назад

    I've only played with mead and cider so far and now I'm thinking I want to dive deeper

  • @jimdeasy
    @jimdeasy 2 года назад

    Pro as always! Wondering about the RIMs tube. You kinda glaze over the mash out step, I know it’s that SS Rims tube doing the work. Any tips on how to run that?

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад

      Thanks, Jim! So for mash out, I increase the mash temperature up to 168-170F at the end of the mash. This takes about 10 minutes of recirculation on my system with the RIMs tube. Once I get to temp, I start transferring to the boil kettle. The high temp stops the enzyme activity in the mash and also makes the sparge more efficient. For the sparge, I like to do a fly sparge with 170F water to keep the temp stable. The trick is to keep the flow rate steady to get a good rinse on the grain. You can gauge this by monitoring the fluid level in the mash tun. Usually I keep it at about 1-inch above the mash bed.

  • @frey311
    @frey311 2 года назад

    Hey man…awesome beer…super clear…question for you about how you clean your system…do you run PBW throughout? Also do you run starsan or line cleaner as well? I’ve noticed I find myself taking most all the hoses off to get a thorough clean…guess I’m wondering if there’s a more efficient way…thanks

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад

      Thanks man! Yea I only use PBW on my brewhouse and tubing. I’m going to do a full cleaning video soon once I get my upgrades finished. After recirculating cleaner and a rinse, I’ll disconnect all my tubing and hang them to dry

  • @omarpadilla4739
    @omarpadilla4739 3 месяца назад

    I do not miss sparging

  • @Rino88dotcom
    @Rino88dotcom Год назад

    Thought the stuff needs to be cooled before adding yeast!

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  Год назад +1

      Yes that is correct. Wort must be cooled before adding yeast. For lagers like this, I typically cool to about 45-50 degrees Fahrenheit.. For ales, you can go warmer.. about 65-70 F

  • @Marceloluizz
    @Marceloluizz 2 года назад

    Amazing video with beautiful filming and edit. Really didactic. If possible, can you enable automatic subtitles in RUclips? It's very helpful to people from abroad. Cheers from Brazil! 🍻

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад

      Thank you Marcelo! Sometimes the captions take a while for RUclips to process, but it looks like they're working now. Cheers from California!

  • @mayer298
    @mayer298 2 года назад

    can u please do a video on how to clean the equipment after a brew day?

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад

      Yea that’d be a good one. Definitely something I’m asked a lot. Do you have a similar setup?

    • @mayer298
      @mayer298 2 года назад

      @@ryanmichaelcarter not now, but I am looking into buying one

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад +1

      @@mayer298 right on! I’ll try and get a cleaning video put together soon 🍻

  • @pimerafina1
    @pimerafina1 2 года назад

    Good evening could you kindly write what the hops are called?
    Hops added:
    -0.25 once (7 g) every 90 minutes (3 IBU)
    -1.25 once (35 g) every 60 minutes (15 IBU)
    -1 oz (28g) every 30 minutes (9 IBU)
    -1 oz (28 g) every 10 minutes (4 IBU)
    -0.50 (14g) at flameout -15 minutes before knocko (3 IBU)

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад +1

      Hey there 🍻 the only hop in this beer is Hallertau Mittelfruh

  • @TheBruSho
    @TheBruSho 2 года назад

    Super cool setup and great filming too! Keep em coming!

  • @MatthewHerrold
    @MatthewHerrold Год назад +1

    why don't you stir in your hops that cling to the ID of the kettle? don't you think you're missing utilization of the hops in the boil?

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  Год назад

      You definitely can, you might save yourself a few cents by doing that. And you’re right, you’ll definitely increase extraction that way. I don’t worry about it tho.

    • @MatthewHerrold
      @MatthewHerrold Год назад

      @@ryanmichaelcarter yeah I think you're probably not getting the IBUs you think you're getting by letting these hops come out of contact with the wort which is needed for isomerization.

  • @ChristyColey
    @ChristyColey 9 месяцев назад

    What is that you used to pull the lactic acid out of the container? I need one of those

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  9 месяцев назад

      It’s called a pipette. I found that on Amazon a few years ago

  • @moedogger21
    @moedogger21 2 года назад

    Nice! Subbed

  • @paolorr
    @paolorr Год назад

    Hey Ryan! Nice video!
    I noticed that the wort is very clear when you transfer to boil kettle. Do you stir the grains during mash? Or just stir when you dough-in? If you stir, how long do you recirculate? I have a brewzilla and I always get grains in the wort before boil 😢

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  Год назад +1

      Thank you! I use a RIMS setup which recirculates during the mash. This recirculation allows the grain to act as a filter and clears up the wort

  • @gerrylynch3991
    @gerrylynch3991 Год назад

    Did you switch brew systems? A few minutes ago I watches your tour of your Spike system but this is a SSBrewtech system. Why did you change? Which one do you like better?

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  Год назад

      Yea I upgraded to Spike at the end of last year. I like Spikes system significantly more. Much better quality and better features.. also welded right here in the U.S. which is really cool

  • @JohnnyReverse
    @JohnnyReverse Год назад

    What is that you used to pull the lactic acid out of the container? I need one of those

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  Год назад

      It’s called a pipette.. it’s basically just a glass tube used to measure liquid volume. I found this one on Amazon

  • @martyandjamie
    @martyandjamie 2 года назад

    good video cheers

  • @normodegard183
    @normodegard183 2 года назад

    What is your boil off typically like? Looks like 9ish gallons down to 6.5? That’s a ton! Do you aim for 6.5 at end of boil and transfer 6 to the conical?

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад +1

      Hey Norm, usually around 1.5 gallon. However my pre-boil volume accounts for trub + the additional volume left in my pre-HX filter and tubing. Normally I will get 6-6.5gal into the fermenter and depending on dry-hopping, I might lose an additional 0.5-1gal to hops/trub + measurements during fermentation

  • @pjoter2243
    @pjoter2243 Год назад

    Thumbs up for Celsius CC

  • @timpolster
    @timpolster Год назад

    Nice job with your video and beer. Just an observation - I think you would benefit from some oxygen mitigation on the hot side. For a 100% pils beer, the color was fairly dark. Not everybody wants or cares, but with your system, it looks to me like you are dedicated.

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  Год назад

      Thank you! The lighting can be a little deceiving. This beer is very light in appearance- more of a pale straw yellow color. Hot side aeration has a very minimal impact on beer, and it’s only apparent on beer that has been stored for extended periods

    • @timpolster
      @timpolster Год назад

      I used to brew that way but have brewed low oxygen for about four years now. It does make a flavor difference, especially in pale lagers. You should at least give it a fair shake as it represented a higher plateau in brewing for me. Cheers.@@ryanmichaelcarter

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  Год назад

      @@timpolster happy to hear it’s turning out better for you 🙌 Cheers!

  • @koplandavid
    @koplandavid Год назад

    when do you drop the yeast?

  • @3444cc
    @3444cc 2 года назад

    Any info on your manifold set up? Thanks

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад

      Hey Paul 🍻 what would you like to know about it?

    • @3444cc
      @3444cc 2 года назад

      @@ryanmichaelcarter Hey Ryan. Guess it is the valve tree. I have Stout kettles and a HERMS set up. Looking for something like this. Not sure if it would work.

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад

      @@3444cc very cool! Those are nice systems. The valve tree I use is a kit that mounts to the Brew Cubes which is a product from Ss Brewtech. It’d be much cheaper to use a few TC Tees and a cross to build a similar rig. You can get all the parts from Amazon- 304 stainless steel. I have a Tee so I can feed my pump with two inlets. And the valve tree has four outlets that I use for mash recirculation, sample valve, whirlpool, and knockout

    • @3444cc
      @3444cc 2 года назад

      @@ryanmichaelcarterYour set up seems pretty inexpensive actually.. $250 ish. Did yours come with the valves?

    • @3444cc
      @3444cc 2 года назад

      The valves alone are $79 which is crazy

  • @jmsnystrom
    @jmsnystrom 2 года назад

    How do you do A diacetyl test?

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  2 года назад

      Hey Jan, the easiest way is to collect two small samples from the fermenter (about 1 fl oz). Microwave one sample for about 15 seconds with a lid to raise the temp to about 150F, then let it cool with the lid on. You then compare the smell and flavor of the 1st sample to the 2nd sample. If you smell butter in the heated sample, then there is diacetyl present

  • @duffycop
    @duffycop Год назад

    Doesn't the German beers do decoction?

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  Год назад +1

      You definitely can, and a lot of people do, but decoction is not necessarily a part of German beer. A decoction is just a process used during the mashing process. Some believe it to give beer a fuller malt profile, but its definitely a subjective topic.

    • @duffycop
      @duffycop Год назад

      @@ryanmichaelcarter oh, I didn't thought it is a subjective matter.. Okay, you've got a point!
      Thanks for the answer! 🤗✌🏻
      Keep it up! I really like your videos!

  • @SarasD14
    @SarasD14 Год назад

    When you added the lactic acid, it became a pilsner, not a german pils anymore.

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  Год назад +1

      The lactic acid addition breaks the German purity law (Reinheitsgebot).. one thing you can do tho is add acidulated malt instead if you like

    • @SarasD14
      @SarasD14 Год назад

      @@ryanmichaelcarter yes. Sir! I use acidulated malt for my japanese rice lager which I brew.! Sick setup tho!.

  • @RISKYTAP
    @RISKYTAP 26 дней назад

    Step one : Be rich enough to afford equipment
    Step two : Do not go bank corrupt before buying the ingredients

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  24 дня назад

      Little equipment is needed to brew beer.. nice gear just makes it more convenient but I have some videos on my channel that show how to do it for cheap if you’re interested

  • @benjaminfauchald2990
    @benjaminfauchald2990 Год назад

    Got 99 comments but this ain’t one

  • @jacsondematos4758
    @jacsondematos4758 Год назад

    🇧🇷🇧🇷👋👋👋🍺🍺

  • @jupireitsema143
    @jupireitsema143 Год назад +1

    Dude. Not all home brewers have 150K worth of brewing gear in our garage. 2 thumbs up on the video quality. 2 thumbs down on relatability. J*sus. Is your garage connected to a pro- brewhause? My wife lets me brew and dirink my beer cause its my hobby.... this level of brewing requires corporate sponsorship or a sugar daddy.
    Ending on a good note.... the video quality is spot on pro quality.

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  Год назад

      😂 thanks man. You can brew great beer with a much simpler system.. the extra features just make things a little more efficient and simpler

  • @newtubeorder8141
    @newtubeorder8141 Год назад

    thats not brewing at home , you got a brewery right there 😅😅

  • @dilldowschwagginz2674
    @dilldowschwagginz2674 Месяц назад

    An authentic pils isn't made with "authentic German ingredients"... It's Brewed with authentic Czech ingredients.

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  Месяц назад

      Actually “Pilsner” is Czech Pilsner.. “Pils” is used to describe a German version which is what this video is about.. very similar style with a few twists

  • @DenkerNZ
    @DenkerNZ Год назад

    This is one damn expensive home brew setup. Jealous!

  • @jurekolar9102
    @jurekolar9102 28 дней назад

    Yeah the process is just fine....But in most videos where those stars of the brewing go through the grain to glass journey but they always seems to forget to mention the fact that they have at least few thousants of dollars of equipment just for experimenting (like few brewing tuns of even few 3 vessel systems) and have their own breweries and they boast about the finesses like water treatment and proteins coagulation or whatever that a person just trying to brew something for a fun will never have......I mean those videos should be intended for a everyday working people who are making beer in the afternoon at home for fun.....Not to make them feel incompetent to make even close resemblance of a similar batch of beer......Another self promoting video

  • @pooterdog2549
    @pooterdog2549 11 месяцев назад

    THat is so much work and so much equipment, great video but that looked like a ton of work lol

    • @ryanmichaelcarter
      @ryanmichaelcarter  11 месяцев назад

      Brewing is a ton of work! About 5-6 hours on brew day plus all the time spent cleaning, kegging, and random other tasks