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    New post a picture of your pint

    Tripel. Been in the bottle for about 4 or 5 months. Young American Barleywine. Only a month in the bottle. RIS. My first brew. The relatively few that I have left have been in the bottle for nearly 8 months.
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    Funny things you've overheard about beer

    Aye, this goes the other way too. I've known a lot of people who swore they hated "dark beer" (which to them is synonymous with Guinness) only to go crazy when given sweet/oatmeal/cream stouts, weizenbocks, and brown porters. Unfortunately Guinness has a monopoly on dark beer at least with...
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    Extract is expensive!

    That works out pretty well for you and where you are. For me, though, it's $3/lb for DME and about 75 or 80 cents a pound for base grains.
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    Extract is expensive!

    Yah, that's why if you extract brew full-time buying in bulk is your best option. Doing so brings the cost down to about $3 a pound. It's still cheaper for grain but it's not quite so stark a difference.
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    Extract is expensive!

    I wonder how much extract the OP bought. For $45 I can get 12 pounds of dry extract which is enough for a 1.100 beer. Most of my extract batches only cost about $30 for 5.5 gallons (excepting HG and extremely hoppy beers).
  6. C

    I f'd up pitching yeast to starter

    What's your OG?
  7. C

    Lürchenbeir Double Chocolate Irish Stout

    Sounds pretty good, but just to be precise what you have with the lack of roasted barley and the addition of lactose is going to be far closer to a sweet stout than an Irish dry.
  8. C

    Boosting ABV in Scottish Ale kit

    3.25% abv is completely appropriate for Scottish ale. Are you wanting to boost the abv just for the sake of boosting abv?
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    What's the worst craft brew (commercial) you've had?

    I tend to think that most SA bashing is done because it's trendy. Craft beer hipsterism. By craft brew standards most of SA's offering fall somewhere between average and good. Their imperial pilsner and dopplebocks are particularly excellent. Their cream stout is probably the finest example of...
  10. C

    Did I Just Ruin A Milk Stout?

    Lactose dissolves in water (clearly illustrated in the case of milk) but as with all sugar solubility increases with temperature. You'll probably end up with some undissolved lactose at the bottom of your fermenter. You can probably take care of it by periodically swirling your fermenter.
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    What's the worst craft brew (commercial) you've had?

    I'd have to add Pliny to the list. Both Elder and Younger. Not because they're bad beers. They're really really good beers. But I still think they're overrated/overhyped. Hell, if mythical ambrosia existed, conferring ageless immortality on its drinker - it would still have less hype than...
  12. C

    Condensation = Angry Wife

    I don't think it's unreasonable of his wife to react this way, especially since it seems to have happened several times. Not only does this damage the flooring it provides an opportunity for mold to infest the wood.
  13. C

    Fermenting concern

    Just remember for the future, checking the gravity via hydrometer will tell you far more about how your beer is or isn't progressing than everyone on this forum combined.
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    What next? Or what's a newbie do after MRB?

    With the setup you describe sounds like you could do any of those. Depends on what you want. Just keep in mind that the ingredients for AG will weigh more than extract so that may be a consideration if you have to ship everything.
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    should I take gravity reading?

    Don't worry about moving to a secondary but I'm doing to dissent here and say go ahead and pop it open and take a gravity reading. It's only a 1.050 amber so it's perfectly possible this beer could've completely fermented in 3-5 days. Take one now and take one 2-3 days from now.
  16. C

    Loooong Fermentation

    In an IPA that's been sitting in primary that long I'd be more concerned about all of your bittering and aromatic compounds having decayed. Otherwise you might as well taste it and see what it's like. Personally I'd only keep a beer on the yeast a few months at most but that's mostly because...
  17. C

    Extract Kit or Buy Individual Ingredients

    For me it depends on the style. Kits are usually fine but since they tend to sit on shelves (sometimes for quite a while) they always come with dry yeast so I wouldn't use a kit for a style that has strong yeast characteristics (abbey style Belgians, wheat beers, etc). Or else I'd buy some...
  18. C

    Help! Too bitter!!!!!!

    This is true, of course, but it's always important to remember that when adjusting for bitterness that the boil gravity also has a dramatic effect on AA utilization http://realbeer.com/hops/research.html
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    Your favorite top five beers?

    This is a really difficult question since I could certainly list off beers I didn't like, but there's so many I do like that it's difficult to choose...But, I reckon if I had to choose only 5 beers to drink for the rest of eternity they'd be: Stone Arrogant Bastard Sierra Nevada Torpedo...
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    differences in brewing costs

    Maybe their LHBS has high prices? There's not one in my town but there is one about 30 miles down the road and their prices about 1.5x more expensive than online. Makes me glad it's so far away that I don't feel morally obligated to patronize it. Otherwise, I have no idea. I just put...
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