Ten GREAT Homebrewing Tips & Tricks to level up your brewing (2023 Edition)

Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль

In twelve years of of homebrewing, I've learned a lot, and I've made a lot beer, wine, mead, and cider. Usually the lessons I've learned have come by trying and failing. And sometimes by looking for shortcuts that don't impact the quality of the end product. For beginner homebrewers, there can be a lot of questions at the beginning. So we made this video help pass along some tips, tricks, and hacks for brewing at home. Stay tuned to the end!
What are your tips and tricks? Let us know in the comments!
David Heath top-crop how-to: • Beer Yeast Top Crop Ha...
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Пікірлер: 61

  • @Heisenbrick
    @Heisenbrick4 ай бұрын

    This channel has helped my wine/mead brews tremendously! I am so thankful for this great information. I also bought the Jack Keller book “home wine making”… started reading it from the beginning today and it is not only a fun read but tons of good info and recipes.

  • @eddavanleemputten9232
    @eddavanleemputten9232 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the tips! Without even thinking about it, I had started taking pre- and post-back sweetening hydrometer readings from the moment I’d gotten my first hydrometer. Probably my control freak side… or the fact that I needed to keep a record of everything, all the time, for my job in finance and insurance. LOL. It comes in really handy not only in the case you want to make a brew again but also if you keep track of how your brews evolve over time. You might feel some brews could do with a little more or a little less sweetness as they get older. Or, if you make a similar recipe, it can save a lot of time if you know the weight, volume and post-back sweetening gravity of your initial brew. Say your last sweet spot was 1.020. Back sweeten to 1.010 and have a taste. Add five more points. How is it now? Remove a sample large enough to fill your graduated cylinder, add enough sweetening to go to 1.020, taste, add enough to go to 1.025. How is it now? Add more? Add less? Keep notes on the final result you’re bottling. Over time you’ll start seeing patterns as well. It’s also handy if you want to split batches (one sweet, one semi-sweet and one dry). Is it a hack to say I keep detailed notes on my brews? I’ve learned so much from my notes! Snap a picture of your hydrometer reading with your phone camera and add a note (name of the brew at minimum, possibly ingredient list for the first reading and just the name of the brew and number of the reading on subsequent readings). Make an album on your phone called ‘hydrometer readings’. When in doubt, you can refer to the photo and complete your notes from that. Getting maximum bang for my buck out of fruit: use a three-step process: 1. Freeze-and-thaw 2. Pectic enzyme 3. Maceration on sugar/honey Combining all three means you have a double attack on the fruit’s cell walls aided by osmosis for maximum juice extraction. Water (and juice) goes from areas of high concentration to areas of lower concentration. Dumping at least part of your honey or sugar on the fruit and stirring it through, then letting it sit for 6-24 hours will cause a lot more juice to come out. After maceration, take a sample reading and proceed accordingly from there. I generally do this in a bucket and after maceration I have my fermentation bucket or my wide mouth fermenter ready with a brew bag. Transfer the fruit into the brew bag, use part of the juice to dilute/dissolve any remaining sugar/honey you want to add, add it and stir. Check your gravity. Adjust if necessary, stir again and pitch your yeast. Whenever I’m too lazy to locate my brewing bags I keep a closer eye on my airlock to make sure I do remove the fruit before fermentation is done, and take an extra hydrometer reading. Then, before it’s done, I pour the contents of the brewing bucket into the secondary vessel through a brewing bag. In a pinch, a large pitcher will to if I want to transfer to a narrow mouth fermenter. Removing fruit before the end of fermentation was a revelation born out of laziness for me! I love that hack! Too much head space and in secondary but no smaller fermenters available? If you have any kind of device that dispenses CO2 and that you can hook up to a length of tubing, shoot some CO2 through the bung hole of your fermenter, creating a blanket that’ll protect your brew. Replace bung and airlock. It isn’t perfect and won’t last years, but it’ll keep for a few weeks. That’s enough for secondary. If in doubt, repeat.

  • @gordondusinberre5677
    @gordondusinberre56776 ай бұрын

    Truly helpful. Glad I found you

  • @cogeek797
    @cogeek797 Жыл бұрын

    I do enjoy making a wonderful easy drinking 4.5% cider from store bought juice. Favorite yeast for it is Nottingham (it's my go to for alot of styles and I like it because I can ferment in the Wyoming resident basement when the fermentation closet dips to the mid to high 50s). Nottingham doesn't ferment as dry as most cider and wine yeasts alot of brewers use for cider and it gives me a nice long lasting head with plenty of lacing which I haven't experienced with the other yeasts. Looking forward to your partiguile video. Also, alot of traditional English breweries will top crop their yeast for future batches. Burton brewing systems take advantage of this or in the case of Yorkshire squares, they will just push the krausen into the next batch with special rakes. Thanks for the great videos. Cheers!

  • @greatwolftactical1793
    @greatwolftactical1793 Жыл бұрын

    The blow off using the airlock is genius......my mind is blown

  • @DointheMost

    @DointheMost

    Жыл бұрын

    Wish I could claim credit! I first saw it on our discord server.

  • @Dogstickfetch
    @Dogstickfetch Жыл бұрын

    These are LEGENDARY. I love the cider-to-test idea!!!! Absolutely killer hacks

  • @timothywilliams2021
    @timothywilliams2021 Жыл бұрын

    Instead of top cropping i will dump a new batch with added nutrients onto the yeast slurry from the last batch. Because there is a ton of healthy live yeast it takes off hard and ferments faster. I like to plan out the next few beers to use the same yeast strain. I usually brew 3-4 batches in a row off same yeast. Never had any issues. I also do the same with a wild yeast i captured for cider and fruit wine. I refrigerate the slurry between batches. Kept it going for several years now.

  • @CristopherCast
    @CristopherCast Жыл бұрын

    New tips just dropped, and these are form the FURTURE

  • @DointheMost

    @DointheMost

    Жыл бұрын

    BC here from 2023 reporting in. It’s not an apocalyptic hellscape…yet! 😎

  • @fatbruhskit6085
    @fatbruhskit6085 Жыл бұрын

    Love all these tips. This is a great reminder for all those small things you can forget. Also, here before Tiger Pat🐯🤠

  • @TigerPat_9180

    @TigerPat_9180

    Жыл бұрын

    I,z Buzy , but there's always Next Time 😜. 🐯🤠

  • @DointheMost

    @DointheMost

    Жыл бұрын

    😂

  • @Kannushi5
    @Kannushi5 Жыл бұрын

    Elevate blow off tubes high above your vessel and it mitigates product loss. Gravity will keep pulling material down the tube making it harder for solids and liquids to escape but not the gas.

  • @bluebirdgreenhouse7201
    @bluebirdgreenhouse7201 Жыл бұрын

    I love your channel! Your style respects the viewer by presenting organized information in fun positive presentations. ❤

  • @simont.4176
    @simont.4176 Жыл бұрын

    Your videos are so good. I love how concise, well spoken are methodologic you are. Definitely my favorite on youtube.

  • @DointheMost

    @DointheMost

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you! 🍻

  • @Bearsharee
    @Bearsharee Жыл бұрын

    Great tips. You've helped me a lot in the last few months upgrading my brews in meads and country wines mainly. Keep it up I love what you're doing!

  • @DointheMost

    @DointheMost

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s always so great to hear! Happy brewing, friend!

  • @gregj1789
    @gregj17895 ай бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @calientecarl6741
    @calientecarl6741 Жыл бұрын

    Ayyy, thanks for the tips!

  • @DointheMost

    @DointheMost

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for watching!

  • @nicholaswelna9303
    @nicholaswelna9303 Жыл бұрын

    For tip #4, about what time during fermentation do you recommend removing the fruit bag? Is there a gravity measure you recommend, or amount of time?

  • @DointheMost

    @DointheMost

    Жыл бұрын

    Generally, you’re looking at around 1.04 to 1.02 for a good time to pull it out.

  • @shadeslayermasta9352
    @shadeslayermasta9352 Жыл бұрын

    Nice video! Definitely picked up some tips. One thing I would say instead of taking yeast from the fermenter make a bigger starter and harvest before it is pitched. To me it helps to not have to clean the yeast and have less modified strains if that is even possible.

  • @staggerdagger

    @staggerdagger

    Жыл бұрын

    What part of the starter do you harvest?

  • @shadeslayermasta9352

    @shadeslayermasta9352

    Жыл бұрын

    @Macul I just pour some of the starter off, you can make a big starter if you want more, but I have been freezing it in test tubes with glycerin.

  • @littlebones88
    @littlebones88 Жыл бұрын

    Taking gravity readings before and after back sweetening is something I've always done. It helps you gauge how much honey in general to get to a certain level of sweetness. Great tips!

  • @DointheMost

    @DointheMost

    Жыл бұрын

    It wasn’t something I really did until I started keeping logs of recipes I wanted to repeat time and again. Super helpful!

  • @TigerPat_9180

    @TigerPat_9180

    Жыл бұрын

    I've found that 2 1/2 Pounds of Honey 🍯 will Backsweeten 5 Gallons of Brew 10 Points . In my experience anyway . LITTLE BONES , it seems like You & I , Brew along the same Line , we Max our Yeast out Stepfeeding . We don't have to Worry about Bottle 🍾 Bomb's 💣. Just getting Drunk from too High A.B.V. , that's why I Drink 🍷 in small Doses , or try to , last longer . 🐯🤠

  • @littlebones88

    @littlebones88

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DointheMost I take rough notes while making mead, then transcribe in a neat orderly fashion to my word program.

  • @littlebones88

    @littlebones88

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TigerPat_9180 Yeah Pat, my first experience with mead was a high ABV sack mead at the renaissance festival in Sterling NY. They had traditional and berry sack mead. I know this because of the strength and viscosity of the brew. in recent years they have been serving hydromel, which to me is like glorified soda pop. Mead has always been to me what sack mead is, powerful, viscous and sweet. When I step feed, I only have to feed twice but have realized it's important not to let the brew slow down much or stop. I'm getting up to 22% depending on the brew, as different substances affect how far the yeast will go. I had a big problem early on with my spruce mead (Christmas in a bottle), actually having to split the batch. Just way too much spruce, I think. Anyway, drink on brother.

  • @TigerPat_9180

    @TigerPat_9180

    Жыл бұрын

    @@littlebones88 Yeah , I think that's the Ticket . Don't let it Sit around Starving , give it What it Wants , When it Wants it , Keep it Marching On . CHEERS 🥂 ! 🐯🤠

  • @jasonlayman8817
    @jasonlayman8817 Жыл бұрын

    lol great video i'm guilty of #2.

  • @DointheMost

    @DointheMost

    Жыл бұрын

    😂😂 knowing is half the battle!

  • @crisejeremy95
    @crisejeremy95 Жыл бұрын

    This is the first video I’ve found of you. Glad i did! But go pokes…

  • @TigerPat_9180
    @TigerPat_9180 Жыл бұрын

    Great Video ! I save the Sediment from Big Batches . Then pour EM all together in a Gallon Big Mouth Glass Jar , put em in the fridge to separate again . And get a Full Bottle of Brew out of it . One thing tho , my Fig Wine , made with Fresh Figs , not Dried , takes over the taste of the Whole Bottle 🍾 . For me it's a good thing, because I Really like my Fig Wine , it has a Pink Grapefruit juice kinda Taste . Being from Florida I have an aquired taste for that Flavor . 🐯🤠

  • @DointheMost

    @DointheMost

    Жыл бұрын

    I would love to know how that ends up tasting! Ha ha

  • @TigerPat_9180

    @TigerPat_9180

    Жыл бұрын

    P.S. Nice Hoodie , That's Your Color . Looks good on Ya 👍.

  • @TigerPat_9180

    @TigerPat_9180

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DointheMost Taste Better than You would Think 🤔 it would . Surprised me .

  • @TigerPat_9180

    @TigerPat_9180

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DointheMost I did it for Science 🔭🧪

  • @JohnFleshman
    @JohnFleshman Жыл бұрын

    Heh I just used the first tip yesterday.

  • @ShopTherapy623
    @ShopTherapy623 Жыл бұрын

    question - I tried making hard apple cider from my apple tree like 4 years ago. I used one of those "Fastbrewing Fermentors" - after going through the process, and letting it sit for like 4 months, it tasted awful. I figured I ruined it somehow (contaminated or something). Let's fast forward like 4 years (and forget the fact that I didn't touch this stuff for that entire period). I opened it up (for the first time) and it does kinda smell like alcohol. I'm scared to try and drink it though, cuz I dont want to get sick. Should I just throw it away? Should I try freeze distilling a gallon of it to see if there's any alcohol in it? Is it safe? Just curious what your thoughts are. If I absolutely shouldnt touch the stuff, I want to get it cleaned out so I can try my hand at fermenting again! I should note that for the 4 years that it sat, it was in the basement, with no sunlight, and its' probably between 60-70 degrees year around down there.

  • @eddavanleemputten9232

    @eddavanleemputten9232

    Жыл бұрын

    Mmmmmmm… I know you asked your question 4 months ago and just in case you haven’t dumped that brew, I’d like to ask you a few questions without which it’s impossible to help… Did you ferment on the fruit or did you use juice? If fermenting on the fruit, did you stir/swirl your fermenter once a day to make sure there’s no mould growing? Did you add sugar? Or was it pure juice? What yeast did you use? Or was it a wild fermentation? Did you add anything else? (Tannins, acids, spices) You said it tasted awful. What do you mean? Sour? Astringent/acrid? How did it smell? How does it smell now?

  • @blakefaulds
    @blakefaulds Жыл бұрын

    lol both carboys emptied at the same time

  • @TigerPat_9180

    @TigerPat_9180

    Жыл бұрын

    The one on the right side had a lot of Foam left in it , from Bubbling. The one on the left side Swirled🍥 Clean . 🐯🤠

  • @RedScreamable
    @RedScreamable Жыл бұрын

    First?

  • @RedScreamable

    @RedScreamable

    Жыл бұрын

    First!

  • @TigerPat_9180

    @TigerPat_9180

    Жыл бұрын

    😢

  • @DointheMost

    @DointheMost

    Жыл бұрын

    Officially?

  • @user-ie1pu6zq1p
    @user-ie1pu6zq1p6 ай бұрын

    First? Oh c'mon, nah. It can't be!

  • @Bearsharee
    @Bearsharee Жыл бұрын

    Hi. What is your discord page? I would really love to join, been following you a while

  • @robertsullivan3970
    @robertsullivan39709 ай бұрын

    Spinning the carboy is almost identical time to not spinning it..... Just the chug from the vacuum break....come on.

  • @riukrobu
    @riukrobu Жыл бұрын

    First? Oh c'mon, nah. It can't be!

  • @RedScreamable

    @RedScreamable

    Жыл бұрын

    We're just two peas in a pod, us.

  • @DointheMost

    @DointheMost

    Жыл бұрын

    Y’all are the best

  • @riukrobu

    @riukrobu

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RedScreamable Twins!

  • @riukrobu

    @riukrobu

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DointheMost 👉😎👉

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