Father Frisky wrote: » Has anyone got this yet or tried it. I've mine on order, had to use parcel motel. I hope to have it Monday and hopefully be supping pints by next weekend Can't post link but website is thegreatergood.co.uk Got a good write up in the times uk.
hkjohn wrote: » Anyone got one of these yet? Was it worth getting?
Father Frisky wrote: » Just to follow up on this. I got it and was very happy with it. Have only used it twice tho, made their american IPA and a pilsner. The ipa was lovely and would definitely do again. The only catch is they don't deliver to ireland yet so was using parcel wizard which adds to the cost
Bogwoppit wrote: » I don’t really get what advantage this kit gives you over a regular kit and a fermenter? Less work maybe, but not much I imagine. The finished product would have to be inferior with the pinter, the cost of the kits is extortionate too! If you want to pretend you’re homebrewing then maybe yes, but if you’re wanting to home brew then just do regular kits. Am I missing something?
hkjohn wrote: » Why would anyone go to the bother of "pretending" they were home brewing? Seems to be a simple to use and not prohibitively expensive system that has been getting pretty favorable write ups in the UK press.
Sure there are less costly units that deliver pints at lower prices out there but at the end of the day, you pays your money and you takes your chance
sharingan wrote: » The main unit seems fine in terms of price, its a bit shinier than a pressure barrel, and robust enough to ferment under pressure. There is a difference between more and less costly kit ingredients, and your kit ingredients being more expensive than commercially sold beers (for which vat/excise etc. is paid), people cry foul. Normal kit beers will work out around 50c .. 70c per pint, and these extract kits are up around 1.50 per pint. It smells of razorblade economics/captive market ****e.
hkjohn wrote: » If you know of a pub where you can buy pints for E1.50, please PM me with the address...
Bogwoppit wrote: » I still fail to see what it offers. As said before, homebrew should be cheap, 10-30c a pint. If you want beer on draft at home without a lot of hassle then buy some mini kegs, there’s plenty on the market. €1.50 a pint? There’s lots of good beers available in shops at that price.
hkjohn wrote: » I bought one and got it delivered via AnPost. Very, very happy with it I am, too. Minimal hassle and excellent results - even my missus likes the IPA. Only complaint is those 10 pints are gone in a couple of nights While am sure you can get cheaper home brewing kits, I am a complete numpty and couldn't be dealing with the mess. The Pinter is very clean and needs only minimum attention. Would strongly recommend it if you want decent booze without having to turn your house into a chemical weapons lab
boetstark wrote: » Tried both lagers. Very cloudy despite conditioning for 10 days. Lots of sediment and a noticeable lemon aftertaste. Can anybody suggest what I am doing wrong.
winstonia83 wrote: » 10c a pint? No chance
shtpEdthePlum wrote: » Tbf you have to leave homebrewed beer mature for a lot longer than two weeks. I would say three months is the absolute minimum.
boetstark wrote: » Got the pinter last month viaan post / address pal. Disappointed with it to be honest. Tried both lagers. Very cloudy despite conditioning for 10 days. Lots of sediment and a noticeable lemon aftertaste. Can anybody suggest what I am doing wrong.
FileNotFound wrote: » They have a Facebook page with lots of tips apparently. Did you get any Vat charges when addresspal delivered?
boetstark wrote: » Yeah had a 15 euro charge from customs