llewellyn wrote:Well, that does sound good, maybe I even could experiment... - would there be any good web links for beginners?
Absolutely.
http://www.howtobrew.com is the best single organized resource, basically a free online book. The author also has the same material in a very popular book form. There are plenty of great online forums, also:
http://forum.northernbrewer.com/index.php is one such.
I can list one one hand the equpiment you need to buy (one-time purchase):
1 Two plastic fermenters, attached airlocks: 22e
2 siphon hose and bottle filler: 6e
3 Empty glass beer bottles: comes free with your beer purchases
4 Bottle capper, bottle caps: 14e
Total comes to 42e here.
A big-ish stew pot would help (2 gallons or bigger).
Then ingredients, about 3 kilos of malt extracts for 5 gallons of beer (55 12oz bottles): about 15e.
15euros / 55 bottles comes to 27 cents per 12oz bottle of quality ale for those ingredients.
It has always seemed to me (and I suppose it really is) like a very complex craft which needs long traditions and experience to work, but in a way it would be quite tempting to make the try.
It's a craft but it's not like building a wooden ship or something. It's actually no more complex than cooking. Almost anyone can make a good soup with a simple recipe. Same with beer. One can make a BETTER soup, of course, if one studies 4 years under a top chef, too. But good soup is good, and good homebrewed beer is good.
Honestly I had the same thoughts as you do before I started. But after reading up thoroughly on the subject and talking with the very large online community of homebrewers, I realized that the feeling was probably because brewers played up the 'long complex craft and tradition' aspect of it to pitch their product. Some ales certainly have a long tradition. But the tradition is simply their trial and error which led them to their current recipe. The process itself is not hard; homebrewers regularly replicate their favorite ales just by finding out the recipe and doing it with the same ingredients and method.