SuburbanFarmer wrote: ↑Sun Aug 11, 2019 10:38 amMakes sense. You’re going to be busy with the fields and such during warm months. In the winter, do your brewing, and store it in the larder.Speaker to Animals wrote: ↑Sun Aug 11, 2019 10:36 amBoth the Scottish ale and the viking's blood mead are fermenting. The ale is fermenting pretty strongly. Sounds like a fish tank bubbling constantly with gases existing the bucket through the water valve.
I am still skeptical of Carlus's prep of building what you need to produce beer for trade from scratch. From my studies (admittedly just figuring this stuff out), it seems like the malting process in particular is really difficult.
There is also the problem of temperature controls. If you go back to the medieval period, people only brewed at certain times in the year.
Growing hops shouldn't be a problem and using whole hops instead of the processed pellets just a matter of skimming them off the top of the batch when you are done, I guess. The grains to make the initial tea aren't so difficult either.
Keeping a yeast culture going.. not so easy without electricity or substantial operations.
Malts.. producing decent malt is about as complicated as brewing itself (possibly more so). Take all the complexity of brewing beer and double it if you plan on doing it all from scratch.
In terms of the challenge.. it's probably worth trying. Producing even one batch of beer made completely on your property would be amazing.
Honestly, to build a system that produces regular batches of beer completely from your own property would be incredible, even if the beer wasn't as good as what you can make with commercial malts, yeasts, and grains.