The Frugal Brewer

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The Frugal Brewer
A penny saved is a penny earned. -- Ben Franklin
When I started brewing, it was a novelty. I wasn't trying to save money on beer. I brewed extract, then partial extract. Then, one day, I was looking at a Northern Brewer catalog and realized how cheap grain in bulk was. That got me wondering how cheaply I could brew five gallons of beer. Though I brew to make the best beer I can drink, I've always tried to also make it as inexpensively as possible. Why not?
The following are my thoughts on brewing frugally. It covers only all-grain brewing. I also will point out right now that there are upfront costs required to save money in the long term. For example, a grain mill will help you save money, but the mills aren't cheap. So, considering the equipment cost, it might be difficult to argue that you're saving money at all. Let's push forward though and assume the equipment is free; let's just concentrate on the expendables.
When you brew, there are inputs and outputs to the process. The output is easy: beer! The inputs?
  • Barley
  • Hops
  • Water
  • Yeast
  • Heating Expendables
  • Chilling Expendables
  • Finings
  • Fermentation Costs
  • Bottling Materials
  • Kegging Materials
  • Cleanup
  • Time


Barley
Barley is cheapest when purchased in bulk. Most of the ales you make will be mainly 2-row pale malt. If you brew lagers, you're probably starting with pilsner malt as your base grain instead of the pale malt. It's sensible to buy these base grains in large sacks. Unmilled grain that is kept dry will last a long time (years) in that sack at room temperature. Once milled, though, it quickly absorbs moisture and odors, and becomes stale, especially when left open to the environment. In order to make use of grain in sacks, you will need a mill so that you can mill the grains when you need them.
Mills can be expensive. While you can spend hundreds on a new mill, used mills can be found. Watch the For Sale area on this forum and other places online. Also, consider a Corona mill, which is an auger-style mill that is inexpensive and functional. I bought my JSP MaltMill from my LHBS when they upgraded. $60. Worst case, you can improvise and re-purpose another piece of equipment, as I did with this paper shredder. Frugal brewers are the ultimate re-purposers.
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I pay about $40 for a 50# sack of pale malt at my local homebrew shop. My shop gives a 10% discount if you produce evidence of club membership or American Homebrew Association (AHA) membership; ask at yours, even if it is online. The remainder of the grains for brewing are usually used in much smaller quantities. Because of this, it's usually inconvenient to buy them in large amounts. So, you're stuck paying roughly 2$/lb for them.
There's a small craft brewery very close to me. I'm friends with the owner, and he let's me add sacks onto his orders. I've also gotten hops from him.
There are lots of ways of storing your unmilled grain. The key is to keep it dry and as cool as possible, though it's not necessary to refrigerate. Many brewers use the orange "homer" buckets that are sold at Home Depot, with the lid that is also sold there. Vittle Vaults, which are made for pet food, will hold a full bag of grain, and are airtight. I use these, and I also store grain in a closet with a bunch of bins from Target.
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Maximizing your efficiency will help reduce the amount of grain you need on brew day. The frugal brewer will try to fly sparge, which in my experience results in marginally better efficiency than batch sparging. I think a good false bottom in the mash tun, and a process that sets the grain bed properly, is necessary to make fly sparging work.
Hops
Hops can be the most expensive part of a beer, especially for IPAs. So, finding hops at low cost, and then using them efficiently, will help reduce the cost of a beer. Again, buying in bulk will help you save money. There are many places to buy bulk hops. Check the vendors on this forum, as well as the many well-known online brewing suppliers. Hops Direct is a direct marketer for their own hop farms, so you might take a look at them for the freshest hops - check in October/November when the fall harvest gets packaged. I'm pretty lucky in that I can buy bulk hops from my LHBS at online costs. See if yours will selll in bulk and get close to online costs. No shipping!
Hops should be stored in your freezer. I don't do that though for spousal disapproval reasons. I keep them in my keezer where it's beer-cold. I've been doing this for years, no problem. Also, hop life is affected by oxygen, so it's important to store them in airtight containers. I use a Foodsaver vacuum bagger to re-package my hops. Take a look at this article for information on storing hops in vacuum jars: Cheap and Easy Hop Storage.
To maximize your hop utilization, try to use high alpha-acid (AA) hops for bittering additions in beer. E.g., if you're making an IPA, you'll use 2/3 less of a 15% AA hop for the bittering hop compared to a 5% AA hop, and the hops all cost roughly the same per pound. The bittering hop provides mainly the bittering agent (AA), and not much flavor or aroma, so you can use any hop here. Magnum is a good inexpensive choice for a bittering hop.
Water
Water might be the least expensive part of brewing. I use tap water, treated with a campden tablet to remove the chloramines. If you're certain your municipal water uses chlorine instead of chloramine, you can simple leave the water in the HLT overnight and the chlorine will dissipate. I've used reverse osmosis water for brewing and it didn't make a difference for me. If you do back-to-back batches and you also use a counterflow chiller, run the hot water into your HLT and use it for the next batches strike water. It will already be hot!
Yeast
Yeast is the only renewable element of brewing. In theory, since it reproduces, you only need to purchase it once. But a lot of things can go wrong with that, including making beers that your common ale yeast work be correct for. So, pick the beer you most commonly make, then try to harvest that yeast from the bottom of your carboy for use on the next batch. For me, S-05 is my regular yeast. After I rack from the carboys, I dump the trub from one of the carboys into 2 or 3 quart mason jars. As long as I'm making a similar beer the next time, one of those jars contains more than enough yeast for two new carboys full of wort. You can save this yeast in refrigerator temperatures for a long time if it's stored very cold (not frozen). I've used jars that were about 6 months old without a problem. I don't think you should use it if it's older than that unless you've got some backup yeast available.
Heating Expendables
Propane
It's the standard method of heating the water and wort. The frugal brewer will ensure that the use of propane is minimized. There are a few ways to do this. Consider wind or fans that might literally push the heat away from your pot. Next, look at your flame and ensure your flame is efficient. The proper flame will result in ideal use of gas (and also minimize carbon buildup on the bottom and sides of your pot). If your flame is not ideal, try adjusting the gas flow, and also try cleaning the jets on your burner.
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Put a lid on your pot when heating water. Also do so when you're heating the wort, until the wort begins to boil, then make sure to allow the steam to leave the pot or suffer the creamed corn effect of DMS in your beer.
There are two ways to buy propane. One is to exchange your empty propane tank for a full one. This is the quickest way, and also convenient since many gas stations and stores (Home Depot, Lowes) have an exchange program. However, it might be less expensive to have your tank refilled. To find a place to refill your propane tank, look to RV sites like KOA camps, or U-Haul stores.
Natural Gas
I don't know anyone who uses natural gas as a fuel for their burner. However, it's certainly possible and in many places cheaper than propane. The pressure regulator and gas jets for natural gas are different than propane, so if you're looking to convert, there will be cost involved. However, many people have natural gas service to their house. If you think you're going to be brewing a lot, perhaps there's a way to connect to your NG service.
Electricity
I'm an electric brewer, and I'm certain that electricity is by far the cheapest energy to use for brewing. There are many other advantages to brewing with electricity that I won't get into here. If you want to minimize the energy in your brewing, consider using electricity.
Chilling Expendables
No-Chill
The cheapest way to chill the wort it to not chill it. There are a lot of proponents of "no-chill" brewing, where you move your hot wort from the boil pot directly to a heat-safe container, then let it cool to the ambient temperature (or temperature of a fridge) overnight. Then the yeast is pitched. The disadvantages of this is that you need to find containers that can handle the hot wort and not also leach noxious plasticizers into your wort. Also, the "hot break" might not be ideal, where haze-producing proteins are coagulated and flocculated during the quick chilling process.
Water / Ice
Immersion and counterflow chillers (including plate chillers) both use water as the cooling medium. Minimizing the amount of water will maximize the frugal brewer's success. Counterflow chillers will chill much more quickly, thus using much less water, but they require a way to move the wort as well as the water. So, in addition to the city pressure pushing municipal water, an additional pump (or gravity feed) is needed.
In the winter, it might be possible to reduce the wort temperature to pitching temperature with only municipal water supply. But in the summer, when the ground is much warmer, that might not be possible. In this case, many brewers will run their municipal water through an additional immersion chiller (coil of copper) in a bucket filled with icewater. Purchasing ice is abhorrent to the frugal brewer. He will want to get ice from his own fridge. Unfortunately, you can't get much ice from a standard fridge.
So, an option is to chill as low as you can, i.e., 80F, then move your wort to the fermentation fridge and wait a few hours for it to drop to pitching temperature. This is what I do.
If the frugal brewer is making a second batch, he will run the now-hot cooling water back into his HLT to prepare for the next batch of beer. It's already heated!
One final thought, for those with a pool. I use a submersible pump in my pool, then use the pool water as the chilling water. So, the water is free (pool stays full in Florida due to rains).
Oh, and one final final thought, if you have a pool, and a pool noodle, and some duct tape, and you're drunk, you could just float your pot in the pool. Cheap cheap. Not really recommended due to risk of rain, dog, bug, and other obvious dangers. I did this for over a year. The frugal brewer is not daunted by danger, and often not burdened with common sense (I also broke a carboy full of wheat wort in that same pool, another story of frugalistupidity that makes the floating-pot technique look like brilliance).

Fermentation Costs
Chest Freezers
The common way to maintain proper fermentation temperatures is to use a chest freezer who's temperature regulation is being controlled by an external regulator. The frugal brewer will want to maximize the efficiency of the freezer and minimize the electrical usage. Chest freezers move heat (and thus cool) through their walls. Thus, any insulation or blockage on the outer walls of the freezer will reduced the ability of the freezer to remove heat, and consequently it will run longer than it should. This should be considered for keezer builders who want to face the freezer with wood; consider leaving a gap that allows vertical convective air flow, with some sort of venting at bottom and top.
Older freezers can be less energy efficient than newer freezers. It might be less expensive to buy a new(er) freezer than to use an ancient, cheap freezer. I have a new 7cu.ft keezer (with collar) outdoors behind my Florida home. According to my Kill-a-Watt meter, it costs me about $1.70 per month to run. Get a Kill-a-Watt from Lowes or online and find out how much your freezers are costing you. You might be surprised.
Bottling Materials
Bottles
I am always amazed when I hear that someone bought bottles. Perhaps I was lucky, but when I began brewing I found a local German restaurant that would save all their 1/2 liter wheat bottles for me. They worked perfectly and were free. Within a short time I had hundreds of bottles.
Starsan
Starsan is the brewer's default sanitizer. It's relatively inexpensive, but the frugal brewer can still substantially reduce the usage of starsan and resulting cost. The easiest way is to use spray bottles (I have two, one near my fermentation fridge, and one near my brewing area behind my house). Don't make a bucket full of starsan. I have brewed for many years with just these spray bottles without mishap. In the event I need an ounce or two (e.g., when cleaning kegs), I just remove the top of the spray bottle and pour it.
BTW, I like to add 2 drops of red food coloring to my spray bottles. I use spray bottles for lots of stuff, and I find it useful to color code them so I don't accidentally spray CLR or bleach into my fermentors :(
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Cleanup
The cleanup process can waste a lot of water, as well as costly cleaning materials. Consider running your chilling water into buckets, and then using that to wash your brewing equipment. Or, run that same water into a washing machine to prepare if for the next load of laundry.
If you clean carboys and/or corny kegs, you probably go through a bunch of water. Consider building or buying a carboy / keg washer. With just a bit of water and PBW or oxyclean, it can clean multiple containers. Maybe this is the next toy for you (have you been good?)

PBW (Powdered Brewery Wash) is the cleaner of choice. It is an oxidizer cleaner, so it will easily remove organic material from surfaces overnight. PBW is a brewery-specific cleaner, so it will only be available from brewing stores. And the cost will dismay the frugal brewer.
Oxyclean is far more economical (and if you find the Walmart brand of the same, you'll get 1UP). I use the Walmart brand and it works exactly the same as the name brand. The Walmart brand doesn't have any perfumes in it, so don't worry about your beer tasting like fabric softener.
Time
Oh brother, if I wanted to save time I'd just buy beer, right? Well, it's a hobby, so we don't really think that way. But there might be a few times the frugal brewer wants to reduce the time commitment. For me, bottling was one of those. I eventually started kegging, which is the quickest, although there is the time to clean the kegs (get a keg washer!).
If you go double-barrel on your bottling day, you can really speed up the process. It might look like a job for a juggler, but it's not bad at all. All it takes is an extra spigot, which you can get at most homebrew stores, and a hole saw to cut a second hole in your bottling bucket. Boom, black belt bottling. BTW, if you use a vinator, just stick those caps in the starsan reservoir at the top and save the step of sanitizing them. You can see the yellow caps in the picture below.
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img-05406-49522-1975.jpg
 
I too agree that ignoring the cost of equipment is a good way to look at it. With some frugal spending and watching for deals you can get a 5 gallon BIAB set up for less than 200 dollars, even less if you skip having extra fermentation vessels.
Even a traditional all grain set up with converted cooler mash tun if you spend 500 dollars, make 100 batches of beer and the equipment only cost 5 dollars per batch. Time and our livers are the only cost of brewing.
 
Good article. Lots of good suggestions. I do many of the same things. The pool is an interesting idea but not applicable to me. I use snow for 5 months a year for chilling.
I either made all of my equipment or bought used stuff from homebrewers that were quitting for pennies on the dollar. My kegerator came from persistent garage sale stalking. (10% of retail)
Ignoring my labor, I have the cost per 12 oz beer at around 30 cents, depending on the recipe, or course.
Bulk purchases and yeast washing give the most bang per buck.
Specialty hops like Amarillo or Mosaic are brutal at the LHBS. They keep forever in the freezer and the bulk shippers pack them really well in ziplock foil. I just got enough for two years from Yakima hops. No shipping or tax on bulk orders.
I buy my two row in 50 pound bags from a local brewery at their cost. They seem very supportive of homebrewers.
 
Excellent article, thanks for writing it. I thought I had an expensive wort chiller using my wife's Jacuzzi tub but your swimming pool has me beat! Due to shipping costs my cost is just over $1.00 per beer.
 
DUDE. Two spigots on bottling day. My mind was blown...and I felt really. really. dumb. Thank you for one of the best captain obvious moments of my life.
 
Bottles are easy to get, just go around to all your beer drinking buddies. I found a lot of New Glarus and Sam Adams and then bought a 12 pack of New Glarus to get the rest. If you already like beer, getting the bottles shouldn't be an expensive process.
 
The pool chill video was hilarious, thanks for sharing!
 
I'm with pwortiz, mind blown with the simplicity of the dual bottling spigots!
 
@pwortiz You're not alone. I'll be getting out the hole saw and forever head-slapping myself for not thinking of this myself. Great tip.
 
Very nice article. I learned all of these methods through years of trial and error. I wish I'd had this article in the beginning
One small tip, make sure your Oxiclean is the fragrance free version. The regular one will perfume all of your equipment.
 
You need to find a way to do away with the Keezer. For total frugality it helps to have a basement that holds at 64 degrees year round, like mine.
You didn't mention "secondary fermentaion" requiring more equipment, so I assume you, like me do with only a single fermenter. I bottle straight from it with a racking cane, some tubing and a filling wand so save the cost of a bottling bucket.
 
@pwortiz I felt the same way when I saw that picture. While I mostly keg at this point, I do make the occasional batch for bottling. My world is completely upside down from the thought of double bottlers.
 
wow great read! The guys at work say I should name my beer hymie's brew because I'm so cheap
 
A lot of great ideas in 1 place. I have to pass on the 2 bottles at 1 time though. I spill enough doing 1 at a time.
 
Nice article...finally someone realizes the time value of money! Especially when you are talking 4-6 hours of brewing, followed by 1-2 hours on the cold side, any time-savers you can employ are valuable, if not only on the "balance sheet" but it leaves more time for brewing/beer!
 
Nice article. Thanks for the ideas. I'm considering ditching my immersion chiller in favor of a pool. Where did you get yours? I'd prefer to buy online as long as shipping isn't too much, as I usually find my LHBS to be a little more pricey than buying online.
 
Even considering the equipment cost, one can start all-grain with very minimal equipment. Especially if they do BIAB or DIY projects. Regardless, if you're saving yeast, buying bulk hops and buying bulk grain it's only a matter of time before the equipment pays for itself.
On top of that, brewing low hopped beers saves me a ton per bottle
 
When trying to save $ it makes sense to figure out what costs the most in a batch of beer. And then the second most and so forth. My grain bill is my largest cost at about $10 per batch for simple beers buying by the sack. If you compare that with the price of LME or DME or small quantity grain purchases a big savings can be had here. What you save will pay for one of the sub $100 mills over not too many batches. At that point your cost to brew really goes down.
Being a low volume user of hops I consider yeast the next most costly ingredient. Harvesting your own yeast for future batches takes care of the yeast cost bringing it down to $0.50 or so per batch depending on your original purchase price and how many batches you reuse before throwing it out.
Using the above methods I get my costs down to about $15 per 5 gal batch give or take. No more than $0.30 a bottle or less. Thats pretty good vs store bought craft beer or brewpub pints. Plus your time of course but after a couple pints who is counting anyway.
Great article. Thanks
 
If you already have a Costco membership, getting your propane there is the cheapest I've found. Tank swaps average around $20 where I live, but its less than half that to fill a tank at Costco. YMMV and other fill stations may be just as cheap, but you're definitely paying a premium to swap your tank.
 
The other part of the cost of exchanging tanks is that exchange tanks from Blue Rhino, Amerigas, etc. are routinely only filled to 15lb or less in a 20lb tank. Refillers like U-haul etc. will fill them all the way, for less than the cost of a 3/4 full exchange tank.
Only exchange your tank when the test date is getting close... :)
 
This is in large part why I am going to get a mill sooner rather than later. Grains are almost always the bulk of the cost of beer (with rare exceptions, like a braggat). I figure even if it costs me $200 on a mill, that only takes about a year or two to earn back in lower bulk grains costs.
If 80% of my grain bill averaged out is pilsner, wheat, 2-row or munich and based on my LHBS bulk prices that works out to a savings of about $8-10 per batch on my typical brews. Only about 18 months to save the cost of the mill.
Of course I need to check with them to see what exactly I can buy in bulk from them. I know flaked wheat and pearl, I'd imagine they'd let me buy some other stuff in bulk (they seem to range about $1.10 per pound in bulk), because otherwise I'll have to order and pay shipping, which drops the savings a lot (but I think when I checked a couple of places I am looking at around $1.35 a pound including shipping, which is still cheaper than the $1.85-2 per pound of base malt bought by the pound at my LHBS)
Still makes sense for me to buy a mill.
That and hops in bulk. My only impediment is my wife. I've been able to scrape by with a pound of pellets in vacuum bags in the freezer, I don't think that I'll be able to scrape more than another pound or two before I get a revolt on my hands (I need a second fridge/freezer :-/)
 
@vnzjunk
One of the things I just tried yesterday for the first, after I saw someone on here write up an article, is making oversized starters and skiving off enough yeast to refill a tube. It doesn't save the cost of DME to make a starter later, but it does save the cost of a new tube of yeast if I am brewing from the same strain within 4-5 months. A lot less hassle than dealing with slurry or trying to wash yeast.
I love saving money, but a lot more hassle isn't worth saving a few bucks, especially since an oversized starter is maybe costing me $.75 in extra DME used to save $6.95 for a new tube of yeast. Using slurry or washing yeast might save the $.75 in DME used to make the oversized starter and another $1 in DME to make a starter from that saved yeast...but at the cost of a lot more hassle (IMHO).
Seems like oversized starters and saving off the yeast is the way to go for best cost savings versus hassle (yes, I know making a starter is a hassle, but a minor one, but I am also leaning towards pre-packaging a bunch of starters by canning them). I'll also probably pitch slurry every once in awhile when I know I am brewing something with the same yeast strain and also complimentary flavors.
By my math the Belgian single I just made yesterday was about $34-35 between all ingredients, cleanser and propane (obviously, a bit of guestimating on propane and cleansers, also assuming I had bought some of my hops per oz, when I had used some from a bulk buy). This for a 1.053OG 5 gallon batch. About $.75 a bottle, which is still a lot better than liquor store prices (even at the 12 pack, which is around $1.20 per bottle after tax where I am for anything that isn't total crap and more like $1.75 a bottle for nice stuff per the 6-pack).
If I bought all of the hops bulk, recultured from an oversized starter (this batch was the first time I made an oversized starter and repackaged the extra) AND was able to get a mill and buy grain in bulk I think it would have cost me around $22, or shaving about a third of the price off. It may not be much, but that is probably the better part of $200 per year in savings.
 
@unviewtiful
I still have to try Costco. I don't know that my local one has propane refill, but I'll check. Every other place near me is generally in the ~$4 per gallon range PLUS $5 for the fill itself (the heck!?!). Makes it around $21 for 19-20lbs in your tank versus about $17-18 for a tank exchange. Still slightly cheaper per pound of propane, but not by a lot and the couple of places that do fills are a lot less convenient than any of the dozen places near me that swap tanks.
 
I have a 100 gallon propane tank behind my house. Its only use is for my in-ground spa. At one time I thought about running copper line and installing another regulator and using that tank for brewing. I get the gas really cheap and they come and refill it for me occasionally. Wonder if anyone has done this?
 
@passedpawn...you can run other appliances off of that tank (grill, turkey fryer, etc), but I think they all have to be made stationary.
Of course you can probably the plumbing detachable, but I don't know what the legality of that is, strictly speaking.
 
@azazel1024.... One thing you have to watch is how much propane you are getting. The Home Depot fills are only 15 pounds!!! I go to a local gas company, Irish Carbonic and Propane, for both CO2 and Propane. Their propane fills are 20 pounds for $21.75. Tanks now have a safety shut off when a tank is filled to full. Irish pumps it in until it stops by itself.
 
My LHBS said they wouldn't care if I brought my base grain in to use their mill while buying and milling specialty grains. Maybe yours will let you too?
 
Great article! Love the pool idea, is that a valid reason to get a pool? I think so!
Kidding aside there is no substitute for research and DIY in equipment for making beer. And also knowing what you want for your end "set up." I knew I wanted to brew all grain so from the beginning I did, I never brewed with extract. I collected equipment for just over a year. 95% was bought on sale. I went HD igloo with my MT and HLT. I bought the fittings, false bottom on sale and put them together. It cost me about 100 for my false bottom mash tun, I saved at least $50. Even as a DIY'er I easily have $1500 in gear... yeah I know! But that includes some big ticket items like my keezer (new freezer, 4 Perlick 630SS faucets), a gear driven malt mill and 8 ball locks. Most all (not the mill) was on sale.
Bottom line is that the beers I like to drink cost $12.99 a six pack and up. Going out you are lucky if you can find one on tap and even a decent beer on tap is 6 bucks now. So when you do the math you can break even in your first summer. Yeah I know!!!
 
Completely enjoyed this article! I have only brewed once and am gearing up (literally!) to brew my second time. This article was interesting and entertaining! Thank you!
 
Good article. I have friends who like to make these crazy beers at like 8-12%, with all kinds of ingredients...runs the all grain cost to over $50 for two cases. I like to do brews under $30 per 5 gal. Of course, doing a higher alcohol beer or a beer that needs a specialty yeast increases your cost. I almost always use dry yeast, as it is way cheaper than the vials/smak paks (again, unless doing a funky beer).
And harversting the yeast sludge at the bottom is the cheapest, but subsequent yeast pitchings will reduce the activity of the yeast (you won;t get as much attenuation as when originally pitched), plus you have to worry about off-flavors and the occasionally infection.
I wish I lived near you. I have two LHBS near me, and it;s highway robbery what they charge for a 50# sack of 2 row - $68! I can get it online, with shipping, for $54. Plus, I don't loose an hour driving, don't have to pay two tolls, and don;t use gas (better for the environment).
 
Want free ice in large quantities? Try your local arena. The Zamboni usually dumps ice shavings in a pile by the back door... Just back your pick-up over and shovel in!
 
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