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How to slash the cost of a pint!

Published 25 September 2009 in Make your money go further

Homebrewed beer is a tasty and cheap alternative to the pub and supermarket, says Malcolm Wheatley.

After finishing work late last night, I had a couple of pints of beer. Nothing exceptional there, you might think. But take a look at the cost: 70 pence. And no, that's not 70 pence per pint -- it's 70 pence for two pints.

Welcome to the world of homebrewed beer. Sales of homebrew kits and equipment have apparently been soaring during the recession, and I'm not surprised. Last October, as the credit crunch bit, I resumed brewing the stuff myself -- after a break of almost twenty years.

Homebrew isn't without its misconceptions. Taste, for one. My mate Brian accepted a pint of my homebrew last New Year's Eve with some trepidation -- trepidation doubtless fuelled by prior encounters as a student some time in the 1970s. In fact, he concluded enthusiastically, "this is all right!"  The second pint went down almost as fast as the first. The bottom line: today's homebrew is very, very palatable.

Mess and complicated recipes are another misconception. Yes, you can boil up and mash your ingredients the old-fashioned way. But you don't have to, and I certainly don't. "Kits" -- containing hopped malt extract and a sachet of brewer's yeast -- eliminate all the mess and complexity, and all you have to do is add sugar, warm water, and stir. And it really is that simple.

Ingredients, equipment and prices

Kits typically make 40 pints. At my local homebrew shop, in a nearby market town, they vary in price from £7.99 to just over £22. In the world of homebrew, you tend to get what you pay for, and the beer I've always brewed is a mid-range product priced at £13.49. Add in the cost of a bag of sugar -- 75 pence or so -- and that's your ingredients sorted. Net cost: 35 pence a pint.

The beer is brewed in a fermentation vessel -- essentially a 25-litre plastic bucket with a lid. They cost in the range of £8-£10, and last for years. You'll need a long plastic spoon to stir it with. A hydrometer isn't really necessary: just wait until the foamy stage has passed, and bubbles are rising slowly and infrequently to the surface. This takes around a week.

After the brew has fermented, you'll need somewhere to store it. A basic pressure vessel from a homebrew shop costs between £25 and £30, or you can use beer bottles. I do both. Cleaning and sterilisation are important, and homebrew shops sell sachets of the appropriate agents.

A word of warning: don't be tempted to re-use lightweight empty beer bottles recycled from (say) beer bought at the supermarket. They might not be strong enough to withstand the pressure if your beer hasn't completely fermented before you bottle it.

Obviously, with your first batch of beer, the cost of the pressure vessel and bottles has to be added into the equation. But the more you make, the more the cost is spread -- I'm still using a pressure vessel and some bottles I bought 25 years ago. But I did buy another vessel last October, from which I've now poured half a dozen 40-pint batches or so.

Getting started

Homebrew ingredients and equipment tend to be heavy or bulky (or both), so buying locally tends to be better than buying on-line. Apart from anything else, you can usually get a better idea of which kit will produce an end-product that tastes most similar to the beer you ordinarily drink.

But on-line stores do exist -- here's one -- and Google reveals plenty of others. There are even "how to do it" videos on YouTube.

Amazon, too, has a good collection of books on homebrewing. So if you are tempted to brew beer in the traditional way, these books will tell you how. Another good source of advice -- for both kits and traditional beer-making -- is Jim's Homebrew Forum.

Happy brewing!

More: 25 extraordinary money-saving tips! | Frugal Recipes

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Comments

gullarm said

  • 0 recommendations

The only point I would make is sterilise everything, this is the big problem with home brew and also why most people fail and give up.

Any bugs will ruin your beer and make it only suitable for the drain.

I use ordinary house hold bleach, have done for years. The stuff from the home brew shops is good but its expensive and seems to run out pretty quick. I fill my bucket to the top and put half a cup of bleach in, leave for an hour then rinse with cold water. At the same time put all your other stuff in as well to sterilise them as well.

Home brew is a piece of cake

Here how I do it. ( easy version )

1) Sterilise bucket with bleach then rinse.

2) Fill bucket with cold water up to around 17 litres

3) Pour in home brew malt kit

4) Add sugar or brew enhancer ( this is better than sugar as it adds more body ) or both!

5) Rinse out tin with hot water from the kettle - need to do this a few times.

6) Top up to 23 litres with hot water - again from kettle ( some kits don't make 23 litres so check.  )

7) Pour yeast on top

8) Fit lid

9) Put on airlock - or if you have no air lock make a hole in your lid and cover with sellotape and poke a pin hole into it.

10) Leave in your house for 7 -10 days, don't lift the lid or move the bucket.

Then Either

1) Syphon into barrel, sterilise as before also pop the syphon tube in as well. Put in ½ cup of sugar or use a CO2 bottle to pressurize the keg

And/or put into bottles, sterilizer with bleach or put in dishwasher on hottest setting. Again using syphon tube. Put in ½ teaspoon of sugar and cap.

2) Leave the keg and bottles for at least a week in the house, then move to some where cooler. it takes longer to clear in the keg, but only around 7 days to clear in the bottles.

The cost is quite high when you fist start out, I worked it out to be around a £1 a pint  with all the gear, but after that it works out around £12 for a kit plus £5 for the brew enhancer so that's £17 for 40 pints or 42p a pint.

I tend to buy from the net and buy in bulk to get the free delivery, some sites can be accessed thru topcashback and quidco.

Sit back relax and enjoy the fruits of your labour safe in the knowledge it hasn't cost you £4.99 for 4 cans.

magnette33 said

  • 0 recommendations

Hi all,

 I though that you might be interested in a home brew system called the Beer Machine 2006. I have been an avid home brewer for 20 odd years now, but have never been quite satisfied with the home brew taste. It has always seemed a little sweet and yeasty, no matter how I altered the ingredients or fermentation period.

 I recently went to a family BBQ where somebody had something called a Beer Machine in action. I tasted a pint from it and could not beleive that it had been homebrewed. It had a very good taste, head and body. I was told by the owner that all you have to do is to sterilise the equipment, add the beer powder, water, then wait 7 days. It makes 16 pints in one go.

 I have done some research online and have found this machine at www.beermachinestore.co.uk. It isn't cheap, at £118 and the beer powder packs cost around £30 for 3 packs, although there is a wide variety of beers available. Aside of the initial cost of the machine, the beer works out at 58 - 62p per pint. I know that it is more than the price of that in the main article, but the quailty is superb and easily comparible to that of any of the mainstream specialist breweries.

Hope this is of some help to you all, regards Adrian.

rlx said

  • 0 recommendations

Hi all,

I have made loads of home-brew in the past mainly with very good results, easily equal in flavour to commercial brews.

I have used kits as a base and modified them slightlly.  The main modificatiosn to get a better taste are

a) don't use sugar -- use glucose instead.  You get a MUCH better taset

b) substitute some of the glucose for malt for a slightly different taste

c) if you can be bothered use filtered water -- it does improve the tase a bit

and don't forget (as mentioned above) absolute cleanliness is a must.  Sterilize everything!

jeep said

  • 0 recommendations

save money,which planet u on.I dont think ive paid more than 35p for a beer in 5 years.u never heard of supermarkets.

magnette33 said

  • 0 recommendations

 Isn't it amazing that some people will drink beer made from natural, healthy ingredients which has a natural full bodied flavour, whilst others will choose to drink cheap supermarket beer that is full of (potentially cancer causing ( I speak as somebody that works in the world of analytical science)) chemicals to improve flavour, colour and body.

Funny old world isn't it!

gullarm said

  • 0 recommendations

Looks like the supermarket cheap booze is coming to and end.

If the gevernment gets its way. The Scots are going for it so expect the Labour fools to go for it as well.

All in the aim of health, yeah right. Another tax more like.

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