How far ahead do you schedule?

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Rebel_B
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Re: How far ahead do you schedule?

Post by Rebel_B »

I will usually have plan for my next two brews; always presuming a beer will be drinkable 4-5 weeks after brewday.
Drinking: Columbus Double India Pale Ale
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FrozenInTime
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Re: How far ahead do you schedule?

Post by FrozenInTime »

I've got recopies I've been planning to make for a couple years. I research, ask, run it past Beersmith, etc, then store it on da hard drive. (Then I usually forget about them..... LOL). Otherwise, usually plan bout a month ahead of time. Been planning on a pumpkin brew.... for atleast a month or more now... gotta git-er-done.
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Kealia
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Re: How far ahead do you schedule?

Post by Kealia »

mashani wrote:What is this schedule you speak of?
^This^

I have on rare occasion planned out a brewing schedule but it's not often. Earlier this year I brewed up a kolsch in February so that it would be ready in May but that's the last time I really did something like that. Usually, I'm more thinking "what do I want in the pipeline now" and its a seat-of-my-pants sort of thing.
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swenocha
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Re: How far ahead do you schedule?

Post by swenocha »

I bounce back and forth on scheduling. That being said, what I intend to schedule never usually happens due to life and the like. But the beer drinks just fine out of season, or I just hold onto it until the next year in the season I intended (winter ale and oktoberfest are the best examples of this). The luxury of having a backlog of bottles, I suppose.
Swenocha is a vast bastard of brewing knowledge - Wings_Fan_In_KC

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nada... zip...

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RickBeer
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Re: How far ahead do you schedule?

Post by RickBeer »

I plan this batch, the next one in three weeks, and sometimes the one three weeks after that. I don't sit down and say "I want to drink a Stout in November, so....:
I have over 9,000 posts on "another forum", which means absolutely nothing. Mr. Beer January 2014 Brewer of the Month with all the pomp and circumstance that comes with it...

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Currently using 6 LBKs.

Beers I regularly brew:
Bell's Best Brown clone
Irish Hills Red - I call this "Ann Arbor Red"
Mackinac Island Red - I call this "Michigan Red"
Oatmeal Stout - I call this Not Fat, Stout - Oatmeal Stout

Bottled 5 gallons of Ann Arbor Red on 4/18/17. Bottled 5 gallons of Michigan Red on 5/8/17.

Brewed in 2017 - 22.13 gallons (19.91 in 2012, 48.06 in 2013, 61.39 in 2014, 84.26 in 2015,46.39 in 2016)
Brewed in lifetime - 282.14 gallons
Drinkable beer on hand -  13.58 cases, with 6.11 cases ready in May and early June.
Average cost per 12 pack through all beer brewed - $6.27(ingredients only)
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lindseywinstead
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Re: How far ahead do you schedule?

Post by lindseywinstead »

I think about brewing most every day, when I have that elusive moment in between the tasks of life. I think that I enjoy planning just as much as actually brewing. I keep a running list of future recipes/styles/experiments and some beers are planned many months in advance. I am prepping now for my Spring 2014 Seasonal (a Spruce Ale - as soon as the new buds of Spring arrive on the backyard tree). I brew one batch of cider each month, and have a wishlist stretching into early 2015. I brew beer twice a month (typically 2.5 gallons at a time). Not to say that the schedule is written in stone. I reserve the right to change up my brew schedule as often as I please. But I love trying new things, and I like having something to which to look forward. So my calendar stays full. And I like it that way. Cheers!
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Wings_Fan_In_KC
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Re: How far ahead do you schedule?

Post by Wings_Fan_In_KC »

I may conceptualize a brew but I don't really plan until about a week before brew day to make sure that I have all the ingredients I need. If I don't, then I still have time to go to the LHBS that's 3 miles from my house.
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Jan 6th: HCCD Mod II
Jan 27th: Diablo IPA Mod
Feb 18th: Pilothouse Pilsner Mod II
Mar 13th: Witty Monk Witbier Mod II
Moved in June disupting my brewing and pipeline
July 19th: OVL Mod II
Late Aug: Bewitched Amber Ale Mod
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haerbob3
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Re: How far ahead do you schedule?

Post by haerbob3 »

me I brew what I feel like when I get to brew. It all sorts out some how. Maybe the fact I brew mostly high ABV beers, for their keeping, has a lot to do with it. One or two beers a week they do tend to last awhile.
im Leben Geduld ist eine Tugend
in Brau-es ist eine Anforderung

in life patience is a virtue
in brewing it is a requirement


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