I am surprised this has not come up here before, as coffee and home brewing seem like parallel hobbies that would attract a similar sort of crowd.
Personally, my coffee and beer journeys have a lot of similarities. I got into both over 30 years ago, but did both on a very amateurish level for a long time without evolving much. In the past few years I got more interested in both. I upped my game a level or two – still very basic but significantly improved, and very happy with the results I am getting. I currently have ~120 bottles (6 crates) of 6 or 7 different brews in the garage, so there is always something to drink.
For a long time I only made the simplest pre-hopped liquid malt kits. I then moved to non-hopped dry extract recipes, adding my own hops. This is a more hands-on approach (though hardly more difficult) that gives better understanding of the contribution of the different ingredients to the final beer. I then discovered I was a hop-head and aroma freak, so added dry hopping and found that I love what it does to the beer – I will not dream of doing a batch without it now. I am still a very low-level amateur. I have not made the move to the all-grain Brew-In-A-Bag method, but who is to say I won’t do it at some point in the future?
Currently I am mostly after hoppy pale ales, light in colour, big on hop flavour and aromas, not heavy on the alcohol (4-5%). Citra, mosaic, cascade, Galaxy, Nelson Sauvin, Amarillo (and a few others) are some of the hops I used recently.
Comparing espresso to home brewing, I find that:
- It is easier and faster to get good results with beer than it is with espresso (contrary to what it may seem if you hadn’t tried either 😊)
- Much cheaper to get into beer than into espresso. A basic beer brewing kit (which is what I use) can be had for around £100, maybe slightly more including ingredients for the first batch of ~40 pints (don’t quote me on that – I haven’t checked recently, but the point is that there is no need for a lot of kit to get started, and it isn’t expensive compared to espresso).
- It is easier to find good beer outside than it is to find good espresso (but one can quite easily make ace beer at home, much easier than getting to great espresso at home IMO).
If you are already home-brewing – What do you do? What do you like? How have you evolved? What have I said that is completely wrong? If you have never tried home-brewing – what are you waiting for?