<3 Beer - Reviews
Coopers Real Ale | May 23rd 2020 | |
Not for me thanks.Normally I do a recipe to the supplied instructions before reviewing. This time I skipped over, using MJ ale yeast, wheat malt and dry hopping with EKG in addition to the booster, as I figured the apparently large fan base of Real Ale made it a sure winner. Nope. By the time it had aged sufficiently to lose the awful iso hop taste which initially dominated the flavour, the EKG had long faded and the wheat malt was stale. No doubt a recipe fail, but I cant disguise my disappointment in this kit from any angle. Coopers do a wide range with some great entries, so I put this down to it being a budget end kit for beer lovers with -er- different tastes. Probably would be ok just doing the basic recipe and ageing a few months. But that would be a bit dull, right? |
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American IPA - Brewery Pouch | May 22nd 2020 | |
Nothing more to doFrom the moment the pouch opened I was certain MJ nailed this one. The malts were just right and the hops excellent quality. The flavour intensity is more than sufficient to permit an extra 500g of ldm above the standard kg of malt booster. Given the style, extra fermentables are virtually mandatory in truth. This one is best sipped, and delivers all the expected fruity floral notes of an AIPA. It takes about 3 months to really peak if you use all the hops. IPAs are supposed to be pungent but it is possible to hold back some here, as the combo herein is truly Bold. There are a couple of issues with this kit. The pouch opening both extract and instructions like all these kits, the yeast is slow to work, particularly so with extra malts, and the recommendation to pitch hops without a bag is downright dumb, given the way these pellets disperse. They are just traps for first timers, not real detractors. Highly recommended for all hop lovers. |
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Preacher's Hefe Wheat | February 20th 2020 | |
Popular but a little disappointingI am a real fan of this beer style, and it has been years between making one so I gave the Preachers kit a run. I used Morgans wheat lme 1.2 kg along with the standard yeast at 20-22 degrees controlled temp as is usually recommended. It pours hazy, with a decent head and has the desired bready, faintly citrus notes with sweetness and low bitterness. The flavour didnt taste its best until about 3 weeks; a bit slower than expected. Unfortunately the promised clove and banana esters are near to nonexistent. Serving at about 9+ degrees celsius is required to taste anything at all. The yeast was definitely not over pitched, so this is possibly because I habitually oxygenate the wort and forgot to NOT do that (oops) or because this yeast really requires fermentation around 17 degrees, as some do, to achieve its best. Friends and family loved it, but to me it was decent but just a little boring. If I did the same again, I would try to correct these mistakes, or otherwise add a little tettnager hops. Given I followed the recipe on the label, I can only give this 3 star unless the reason for the lack of ester development is clear. |
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GENERIC - Homebrand Draught | January 26th 2020 | |
Ok for a cheap brewFor 9 bucks a can, what do you get? On opening the kit, it had little aroma or colour vs other kits. Likewise the final product had with minimal body and flavour and a head. Initially it had a very unusual cidery, cross cardboardy taste that I have never experienced before. The yeast is hardly premium grade and beer probably needs racking off as soon as the primary ferment is done. I brewed with dextrose only and no dry hop; any more seemed pointless for a budget batch. Given it is 25% cheaper than a Coopers kit, you are probably getting what you pay for. My recommendation is to buy a better kit though. update: after a month ageing the nasty flavours cleared up. It pours clear and really tastes like a generic xxxx / vb just a little less flavour. A little dry hop would really help but it makes more sense to me to just spend the money on a better kit. |
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ROASTED STOUT WITH DRY HOPS | January 16th 2020 | |
One to chew onFirst impressions are outstanding. MJ have gone to some length to create a quasi-craft brew experience with high quality malt, yeast and dry hops. One gripe: The pouch may yield better product to the consumer, but its design ineeds work. It is very difficult to access the instructions without opening the extract part of the pouch. Not that there is any special wizardry therein, so no matter for experienced brewers. A gift from my darling wife so made with 1kg lhbs brew enhancer she provided (seems to be coopers no 2 clone) plus an extra 320g ldme, as it was dark enough, but not stout enough already for my taste. The galena hops included smell divine! Tasting out of the fv gives intense dark malt character, strong roasted grain backbone and sufficient tannin to indicate this should be well aged. Hop presence is too strong at this stage, but this will be necessary to survive lengthy ageing. The strong ale yeast worked very effectively, and true to style, left relatively little trace in the final product. I dont expect it to taste the way it should for a few months (unlike the optimistic 3 weeks on the label) but will attempt to update as it goes. Will probably try it with some lactose next time though, as there will certainly be a next time. update: over 3 months the flavours transitioned well, subtly sweetening and developing beautiful coffee notes. A winter winner. |
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Coopers India Pale Ale (IPA) | January 15th 2020 | |
One of the best value kits aroundThe 4 star rating is because the kit, on its own, is really just the foundation for a superb brew. Unlike some more recent innovations, e.g. MJ's craft series, the rest is up to you. Add the right blend of malts and hops and you have a 5 star product. As a base kit though, it is a real threat to many a craft beer in it's own right. A little sweet, and not as bitter or floral as many IPAs, very much what you would expect from an IPA though. Good complexity and progression of flavours on the palate. The kit yeast is excellent too, no pressing need for upgrade. Pours quite dark and a little cloudy. Overall, it is well balanced IMHO. I prefer with some dextrose, rather than all malt as prescribed, to crisp it up. Also dry hopping with a little cascade and citra hop for a couple of days before bottling really gives it a boost. One you need to try, for sure. |
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Coopers Dark Ale | January 15th 2020 | |
An old time favouriteCoopers dark ale is a bit of a tradition here. Probably the kit I have most experimented with because, while it is on the budget end of the range, it offer the most of what I like in a base for a vintage ale or winter dark ale. The base recipe results in a beer with moderate bitterness and complexity of flavour, very much of Tooheys Old style but lacking a little body and maltiness, hence the 3 star rating. Get creative and this can be improved, particularly with the right yeast and adjuncts, but some aging is also critical as the flavours take some maturation to develop. I used a custom yeast blend based on champagne yeast, with lme and yeast nutrient, aged for 6-9 months to get some serious ester complexity and stunning bubble streamers. But this is going too far to affect the rating on the basic kit. You can afford to play with it though. |
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Family Secret Amber Ale | January 15th 2020 | |
No fuss, good chuggerCoopers managed to nail the low hop, solid malt character of amber ale with this kit. Given the style, there isn't a need to stray too far from the base recipe. It begins with strong toffee notes and this progressively mellows with age. Your reward for waiting is a fairly sweet, mildly bitter drop with some background that, while not overpowering, lets you know it is not an average cleanskin. That is the main benefit, but possibly an achilles heel too. If you insist on being genre perfect, anyhow. Play with the recipe too much and the result may not be the everyman's inoffensive, sessionable brew an amber should be. That doesnt mean you shouldnt try though! Otherwise it is the easiest, no brainer kit to get right. Be careful, it can go down fast on a hot summer afternoon. |
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Brew A IPA | January 15th 2020 | |
One of the best value kits aroundThe 4 star rating is because the kit, on its own, is really just the foundation for a superb brew. Unlike some more recent innovations, like MJ's craft series, the rest is up to you. Add the right blend of malts and hops and you have a 5 star product. As a base kit though, it is a real threat to many a craft beer in it's own right. A little sweet, and not as bitter or floral as many IPAs, very much what you would expect from an IPA though. Good complexity and progression of flavours on the palate. The kit yeast is excellent too, no pressing need for upgrade. Pours quite dark and a little cloudy. Overall, it is well balanced IMHO. I prefer with some dextrose, rather than all malt as prescribed, to crisp it up. Also dry hopping with a little cascade and citra hop for a couple of days before bottling really gives it a boost. One you need to try, for sure. |