Home
Events
Wine
Cider
Beer
Keg Equipment
Still Spirit® Equipment
Olives
Mushroom Kits
Beer Signs and Steins
On-Line Shopping
Homebrew Club
About Us
Photos
Directions
Newsletters
Mailing List
Links
  Beer

Keystone Homebrew Supply has all the equipment, gadgets, and ingredients for making extract, partial mash, and all grain techniques.

Brewing Your First Beer

To brew your first batch of beer you'll need several inexpensive gadgets. We supply everything you'll need in our True Brew Equipment Kit for only $64.95. Our kit includes:

  • Primary fermenter, 6 gal., food grade plastic
  • Bottling bucket with spigot, 6 gal., food grade plastic
  • Airlock
  • Stick-on thermometer
  • Auto Siphon
  • Hydrometer
  • C-Brite cleaner, ten 0.8 oz packs
  • Bottle brush
  • Priming sugar
  • Bottle capper/caps

This is all the basic equipment you'll need except for a kettle and bottles. You probably already have a kettle: any stainless steel or enamel cooking pot that holds 16 quarts or more will do. We sell bottles, or you can reuse regular, non-twistoff bottles. Shop now! We also suggest purchasing a book on homebrewing, such as Charlie Papazian's The New Complete Joy of Home Brewing which we sell at a discount rate of $12.00.

Once equipped, you're ready to brew at the beginner (extract brewing) and intermediate (partial mash brewing) levels. There are three basic ways to make beer at home, extract brewing, partial mash brewing, and all-grain brewing.

Extract Brewing

Most beginners start off with quick and easy extract brewing. Extracts come in liquid or powder form in a variety of beer styles, often including hop flavor to balance the natural sweetness of malted barley. We can help you select from dozens of extracts to make any style of beer.

Brewing with extracts is easy. Here's a quick walkthrough of the steps: First, put the cans of extract in hot water (120F or higher) for 20 minutes or so to help the thick syrup run out of the can. Meanwhile, bring a gallon or more of water to a boil in a 16-quart or larger stock pot. Once boiling, remove from heat and stir in the extract until it is completely dissolved. Return to heat, bring to a rolling boil for 15-30 minutes.

Once boiled, cover the pot and cool to 70-80F by sitting in a sink filled with cool water and ice. Once the bottom of the pot is cool to the touch, pour into your fermenter. Add water to fill the fermenter to the 5-gallon mark. Put the stick-on thermometer on your fermenter to ensure that the temperature has cooled down to between 65F and 80F, then add yeast.

Let ferment until bubbling has stopped (about ten days), siphon into your bottling bucket, add priming sugar, and bottle. Let bottles sit for two weeks to carbonate. Enjoy.

Extract Brewing with Specialty Grains and Fresh Hops

This method uses extracts but borrows some of the raw ingredients from all-grain brewing to improve the flavor. Adding fresh hops and specialty grains such as roasted barley or CaraMunich malt can transform extract brewing into an award-winning beer.

Here's a quick run-through of partial mash brewing, assuming you are familiar with extract brewing, mentioned above. While your cans of extract are warming, put your grains into a couple of muslin bags, approximately a half a pound per bag, and knot the end so the grains won't spill out. Soak the grain bags for 20-30 minutes in your brew kettle with hot, but not boiling, water. Rinse the grain bag a few times to get most of the flavor out, then discard. Remove brew pot from heat, stir in extracts, bring to a boil. Once at a boil, add hops (also in a muslin bag), and boil for one hour, following the recipe's directions for the timing of hop additions. Chill and ferment as above. Our box kits are a great way to get started because they come complete with precrushed grain, hops, liquid yeast, and specialty ingredients tailored to tried-and-true recipes. Most of our kits cost $34.95.

All-Grain Brewing

Once you are familiar with partial mash brewing, it's not such a big step to brew beer from scratch. And while creating your wort (unfermented beer) from grains will require a few more hours and few more pieces of equipment, the result is usually better beer. Properly used, fresh grains are less expensive and better tasting than malt extracts.

In addition to the basic equipment mentioned above, you'll need, at a minimum, mash tun, mash rake, and a wort chiller. Keystone Homebrew sells everything you need, and a lot more.

How-To Articles on Beer
Here is our growing collection of directions, tips, and techniques on homebrew from our newsletter. Click here.

Specialty Grain Ingredient Kits

Here are our tried-and-true ingredient kits, specially formulated for the new brewer with limited beer knowledge or an intermediate-level brewer looking for some inspiration.

Our kits provide a tried-and-true recipe, ingredients, and brief directions for making great beer. No mashing is required with our specialty grain extract kits. These recipes were updated February 2008 to reflect our anticipated hop inventory. Our kits start from $36.95. Shop now! Choose from:

Golden Ale American Pale Ale
Belgian Dubbel Scotch Ale
Belgian Saison Belgian Tripel
Belgian White German Bock
American Brown Ale Red Ale
Czech Pilsner American Lager
Dunkelweizen Barley Wine
English IPA Pumpkin Ale
Irish Stout Extra Special Bitter
Nut Brown Ale Oatmeal Stout
Octoberfest Pete's Wicked Ale® Clone
Porter Amber Ale
More coming soon!

The Ultimate Fermentor
Conical stainless steel, with all the features the pros have. See more.