Meat-O-Rama;3987524 said:
What kinds of beers have you brewed up for yourself? Any favorites?
I've made several, some of them many times over, and all of them ales because lagers need to ferment at a lower temperature, and I don't have a fridge devoted to brewing.
- Pale Ale (so-so...not as flavorful as I was expecting, but the grains you use don't impart much flavor...not one of my favorites).
- Amber Ale (very good...one of my favorites. I've made this one many, many times. Good flavor due to a variety of darker grains used).
- Stout (also very good, though the first batch I made was better than all the subsequent attempts, and I'm not sure why. I keep chasing that first batch, but I just can't get it exactly the way I want it. Not as easy of a brew as I would have thought. I prefer them with a rich malty, coffee, chocolate flavor but with a light body. Next time I'm going to use even more grains and see how it goes).
- Belgian Ale (strong and hearty. You use rock candy in the boil which gives the yeast more sugar to consume and thus more alcohol as a by-product. You can really taste that alcohol in this one...about 12%...about the same as wine).
- Wheat Ale (Different but good. Some people like wheat beers, some don't. Not my favorite but I'm sure I'll make it again some day).
- IPA (I'm not a hop-head like some of my friends, so I don't make this one very often. If you like hops, this is the one. Strong hop flavor comes from dry-hopping which is adding hops to the wort [the liquid that becomes beer] after the boiling...while it's in the fermenting bucket).
Brown Ale - (Another favorite and easy to get right. A bit of chocolate grain and low bittering hops makes this a good, malty, light, refreshing beer. Some people like to add honey to the boil, but I've never done that).
I made a Stout once that really turned into more of a Porter because I didn't have the right ingredients at the time (I used light malt instead of dark), but it turned out okay.
What I want to try is some barley wine, but barley wine takes longer to make, and I'm usually not that patient.
I guess my favorites are the stout, the amber and the brown ales.