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This friendly, hands–on guide walks you through each step in the brewing process at the beginning, intermediate, and advanced levels. It fills you in on all the homebrewing basics with a comprehensive equipment list; instructions on keeping your hardware clean and sanitized; and loving descriptions of the essential beer ingredients, their roles in the brewing process, and how to select the best ingredients for you beer. You’ll also find out about additional ingredients and additives you can use to give your homebrew distinctive flavors, textures, and aromas. Discover how to:
Homebrewing For Dummies, 2nd Edition is fully updated with the latest brewing techniques and technologies and features more than 100 winning recipes that will have your friends and neighbors singing your praises and coming back for more.
Make your own delicious lagers and ales
Want to become your own brewmeister? This must–have guide gives youeasy–to–follow instructions in everything from brewing and bottling tostoring, pouring, and kegging your own beer. You get the latest on requiredequipment and new brewing methods, as well as over 100 tried–and–true recipes. Plus, you′ll see how to take part in homebrew competitions!
Discover how to:
Set up your home brewery
Select ingredients and flavorings
Brew basic beers,specialty beers, even cider and mead
Evaluate your beer and troubleshoot problems
Become an eco–friendly brewer
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A couple of points to think about though.
Why are all the recipies only given in ounces, pounds, cups, (what is that all about?) pints and gallons. Surely a half competent publisher would have produced the recipies in SI units as well, if for no other reason than to help sell the book in every other country in the world other than the US (there's quite a lot of people out there who aren't American).
The other thing is that I've been happily converting a gallon to 4.5 liters. Then it struck me that American pints are different to British pints, so are American gallons different as well? It turns out that they are, an American Gallon is only worth about 80% of a British (Imperial) gallon (I thought that Americans always think big?). Even with my miscalculations I still haven't had any major disasters, but it goes to show that some small adjustments to include SI measurements would greatly enhance the book.
I've done a fair bit of microbiology in my time and I'm a bit of a pedant, so I get annoyed with people using the word 'bacterias'. This is a tautology, bacteria is the plural. One bacterium, two bacteria, it just sounds (and looks) stupid to say/write 'bacterias'. I must say that I have only found this instance once and on other occasions the word bacteria is used correctly, so, to be fair, maybe it's just a typing error.
On the whole a well written and lucid book, much better than other '...for Dummies' books I've got. Highly recomended. Enjoy your first homebrew, and enjoy this book, I have.
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