If you love beer enough to want to make it at home, the MiniBrew Craft is a fantastic - if expensive - way to do it. Here’s our review.
Should I Buy The MiniBrew Craft?
Our Verdict
Price When Reviewed
- $1199
MiniBrew is one of several automated brewing machines you can buy. But figuring out who would buy one is tricky. If you’re starting out in homebrewing, the MiniBrew might not be the obvious choice, sitting as it does at the extreme opposite end to the inexpensive option of brewing from cans of malt extract in a plastic bucket.
However, unlike that basic equipment the Craft is effectively an all in-one microbrewery: mashing, boiling, fermenting, conditioning… even serving from the same keg.
It’s a marvel of design, accurately controlling the temperature throughout the process and ensuring repeatable results. Plus, as you’re only brewing around five litres at a time, it’s ideal for small, experimental batches. For some, this capacity will be a deal-breaker, but if you buy multiple kegs it’s not that much of an issue.
Price & Availability
Unfortunately this doesn’t include everything you need for your first brew. You must also buy a Service Pack (€24.99 / £22.99 / approx $27) unless you already have the sanitiser, proprietary CO2 cartridges and tea bags for the hops.
You will also need to pick at least one 'Brew Pack' which includes the grains, hops and yeast to actually make some beer. Currently there’s a very good variety of styles offered, but they are all from four breweries in the Netherlands. See the brew packs here.
Brew Packs range from €17.99 / £16.99 / $19.99 to €29.99 / £29.99 / $33. Each pack makes 5.5 litres, so it isn’t particularly cheap per pint.
Of course, you could argue that the price per pint is largely irrelevant: no-one gets into home brewing to save money. It’s a hobby. And if you buy a MiniBrew, an expensive one.
You can now buy a MiniBrew Craft from Amazon, which saves on the hefty delivery charge you’d otherwise pay if you bought it directly from MiniBrew in the Netherlands. 14 Brew Packs are also available from Amazon and are delivered free for Prime members. MiniBrew charges €15 for delivery, so this is again a big saving. However, Amazon does not list
BeerWulf is also stocking the MiniBrew Craft in the UK, but doesn’t yet sell Brew Packs. However, it does have the Starter Pack which comes with three Brew Packs and one Service Pack for £1173.96.
The base kit is fine, but you’ll soon discover that a single Smart Keg isn’t enough, since one brew could be in it (until consumed) for between 6 and 8 weeks. With multiple kegs, you can brew a second beer as soon as the first one begins to ferment.
Right now, there’s a special Easter bundle which gives you a free keg, free brew pack (Traiectum Tripel) and a free service pack. That lot is worth about £400, so it’s a great deal. This isn’t available from Amazon, though, only direct from the MiniBrew website.
If you want more kegs, there's a MiniBrew Craft Pro pack. This costs €1999 (approx. £1689 / $2180) and comes with three Smart Kegs plus a year's subscription to the Brewing Portal. The latter gives you access to the controls you need to brew your own recipes with your own ingredients.
Features & Design
The Base Station is pretty large, measuring 580 x 480 x 300mm (H x D x W). And there are a few minimum requirements before you can start brewing:
- Wi-Fi connection
- Water connection
- iPhone or iPad
- A drain for waste water
You'll only need the Base Station out on days when you're actually brewing, and it needs a water feed. If you have an easily accessible threaded tap (the type used for washing machines and dishwashers), use it, but an outdoor tap will do - or a kitchen sink tap with the appropriate threaded connector.
The iPhone / iPad requirement is temporary: an Android app has been in the works for a while now, but is planned to launch by the end of 2020.
The real sticking point is that the app is the only way to control the Base Station and Smart Keg, so you can’t brew beer without it. There are controls or displays on the Base Station or keg: they communicate with MiniBrew's servers via Wi-Fi.
Once you've set up an account in the app, you scan the QR code on the lid of the Brew Pack. You're then guided step-by-step through the process of sanitising the Smart Keg (which is done automatically using hot water) and preparing the grain before it goes into the mash tun.
You can only swipe through a certain number of steps to see what lies ahead, but once you've brewed your first batch, you'll be much more confident about what needs to be done and you'll also be a lot faster.
While the app does a good job of guiding you through the process, the sheer number of parts involved can be overwhelming at first. And as the kit arrives in three separate boxes, it can be hard to track down the components you need for a particular step.
After the first step of sanitising the keg, you pour the specified amount of drinking water into it. Then you mix a different amount of water in with the grain and then put it all into the mash tun.
Once the yeast is added, the CO2 canister is used to fill a trub, a plastic container which attaches to the bottom of the keg. This has to be emptied a couple of times during fermentation, but the app doesn't allow you to see this ahead of time: you can only see that your interaction is required at a certain time and date.
You can't keep track of the beer's specific gravity during fermentation: only the temperature of the wort.
From figuring out how to get a water supply to the machine, to brewing and then cleaning the Base Station (which is again automatic) it took me around 10 hours the first time.
The second time was much faster: around an hour to prepare everything, then it’s possible to leave the MiniBrew to get on with mashing and boiling for a couple of hours. However, it is worth keeping a close eye on it during the boil to ensure that the hop bags do indeed drop: three of the six failed in my second brew, but I was able to react quickly and give them a quick poke so they went into the keg.
The other main issue is flaky Wi-Fi. Despite a strong signal, both the base station and keg repeatedly lost connection and only sometimes managed to reconnect. I tried different hardware, but the result was the same (and no other devices had issues connecting to those access points).
Fortunately, this didn’t happen at any critical points but MiniBrew’s support team are fast to respond to cries for help and can remotely control everything to help ensure a brew is never wasted.
Serving Beer With MiniBrew
MiniBrew Brewery Portal
You’ll no doubt get to a point where you feel you want to brew your own recipe and the MiniBrew allows for this via the online Brew Portal. The bad news is that this isn’t free: access costs €89 per year.
Once you log in you’ll be faced with a sparse interface with very little help. And, strangely, no recipes to try, and no way to import or export a recipe. If you wouldn't be able to enter the sort of information shown below, you'll need to go away and figure it out before you start entering your recipe into the various stages.
It seems the Portal is intended only for experienced brewers who know which grains and hops to use and in which quantities.
There are various failsafes to ensure the brew is drinkable, and it will calculate the ABV and IBU based on your recipe.
However, it is not idiot proof. With some help from the Facebook group, I put together an American pale ale recipe which involved dry hopping. But at the point the hops needed to be added to the keg, the app told me to simply drop them in.
This would have been disastrous, as there would have been no way to remove them. It also failed to tell me to remove the hops after the four days I had set in the recipe, so clearly some brewing knowledge is required to use the Portal.
Should You Buy A MiniBrew Craft?
If you're keen to brew all-grain beer and want what is effectively a robot to control the process for you and ensure you get great quality beer at the end, the MiniBrew does the job well.
It's expensive, but the other snag (and the clue is in the name) is that you can only make 5L at a time.
It's possible that you might prefer to invest in the sort of equipment that will enable you to brew four or eight times as much, and even if you go for a temperature controlled fermentation vessel, you'll still have change from £1000. Plus, there's a much cheaper alternative in the Pinter, although you could successfully argue that it isn't comparable with the Minibrew.
There’s something else to consider, too. Very few companies that make beer brewing devices have lasted very long thus far. PicoBrew, MiniBrew’s main rival in the US, recently went into receivership. And while there are no signs that this will happen to MiniBrew, if the company did ever run into trouble you would be left with no way to use your Craft machine as it relies on the firm’s servers to operate. There is no manual override.
But if you are happy to take the risk, you will enjoy brewing great-tasting beer at home. Just make sure you buy more than one keg.
0 comments:
Post a Comment