Pleased with our first attempt at brewing beer at home, we started another fermenter’s worth last weekend. This time around, we’re brewing a Woodforde Real Ale Kit, and as we ride the trains five days a week, we thought Great Eastern Ale particularly apt.
With no sugar to add (it’s already included in the concentrate), this kit and the process is much simpler than the one which gave us such good results last time. The added airlock from the wine fermenter means we should be able to keep a more accurate eye on it, too.
First, we sterilised the fermenter, and stood the two 1.5kg cans of tar-like concentrate in boiling water for five minutes, as directed. Pouring them into the fermenter, we added 3.5 litres (6 pints) of boiling water and topped up to 23 litres (40 pints) with cold liquid, thoroughly mixing all the contents together.

Once they had dissolved, we then added the most potent ingredient, the yeast, and left it to bubble away next to the electric radiator in the kitchen for a few days. It’s certainly been doing something, as the bubbling has been almost constant, making us wonder how we managed to make so much good golden stuff the last time we tried.
All of that was on Sunday. It’s now Friday, and sometime over the weekend we’re hoping to test the brew for the correct gravity. If it’s all right, we can then bottle it, and learning from the wine and the beer the first time around, we should have it easier when it comes to siphoning. Fingers crossed.




