Try one of our peer reviewed recipes and ingredient kits! Each of these recipes are designed and hand crafted by the staff at KJ.
All kits include the required ingredients and instructions.
Try one of our peer reviewed recipes and ingredient kits! Each of these recipes are designed and hand crafted by the staff at KJ.
All kits include the required ingredients and instructions.
Starter kits are a great way to get started brewing. Our different kits have everything you need to get that first batch cooking.
Starter kits are a great way to get started brewing. Our different kits have everything you need to get that first batch cooking.
March 01, 2019 7 min read
One of the best parts about making beer (aside from drinking it) is the social aspect. Brewers love to swap recipes, discuss what well or horribly wrong in their brews. We thought it would be a fun idea to start a beer conversation here. We're going to make a beer every month here and encourage other brewers to make it as well. In the end, we're hoping we can share our opinions and experiences with the recipe and crowd-source some improvements. The recipes will be easy to make and we will gladly assist new home brewers in the production of these beers. They will all be 5.5 gallons in size. We find that after fermenting and racking a 5.5 gallon batch turns into a standard 5 gallon batch pretty quickly.
At the start of every month we will post the recipe in store, as well as on our website, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. We will also have a set price for the recipe that will include a discount of up to 25%!
We’re very excited for this recipe. For the last couple of years we have partnered with a local homebrewing group called True Grist with various bulk buys and projects. Recently they held a ‘People’s Choice’ contest; a bunch of their members submitted one recipe and they anonymously voted on a winner. Phil Harrison’s ‘Mild Thing’ was the winner and we’re featuring his recipe for our March Beer of the Month!
Phil Harrison, originally from England, is a fisheries scientist at the University of Waterloo. His father is a card carrying member of the CAMRA (Campaign for Real Ale) and this beer was designed for his old man. It is a ruby red, low alcohol, school night beer, with enough malty rich roasty character to keep coming back too. It’s not a beer that needs to age, and Phil recommends it be served with a lower CO2 volume (1.5 vol or less).
Mashing -> converting the grain into a fermentable liquid.
Boiling -> Hop addition time
Fermentation -> Turning the wort into beer
Bottling -> We’re getting close to Beer Time now.