Beer Newbie - Lowering ABV in kits

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lewysapllyn

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Hi all,

I'm totally new to beer, though I've a bit of experience with cider and fruit wine from a few years ago, so understand general brewing ideas.

I'm thinking of starting my exploration of beer using one of the inexpensive Wilko kits, likely a bitter or something like that. I.e: Caxton Best Bitter

I notice, however, that the kits suggest that they will brew out to 4.8% ABV, which is a bit on the strong side for me. I'm curious as to whether halving the amount of sugar that goes in will lead to a rough halving of the ABV? I've seen some other threads on this forum which suggests reducing sugar content rather than increasing water content in order to keep a decent flavour, but reduce ABV. Does anyone have any experience of this and could give some advice?

A secondary question is that I've seen threads mentioning cold-crashing. I've yet to read up on this fully, but I know for a fact that I'm not going to be able to do that easily (3rd floor flat with no outdoor space doesn't help the situation). Is cold-crashing essential or can I get around it?

Cheers
 
First, yes you can reduce or not bother with the sugar at all if you want a lower abv.
There are malt derived sugars in the extract, so even adding no sugar should get you something with around 2.5-3%

You don't need to cold crash. It's just a way to get your beer to clear faster, so just be a bit more patient.
I don't cold crash & I leave my wort to cool naturally. Why waste energy when it's so expensive?

In my opinion, the forced cooling is only important if you are trying to copy a beer style that requires it and you have added a lot of expensive specialised ingredients that you can't afford to risk (like stupid amounts of hops in these trendy yank style beers)
 
First, yes you can reduce or not bother with the sugar at all if you want a lower abv.
There are malt derived sugars in the extract, so even adding no sugar should get you something with around 2.5-3%

You don't need to cold crash. It's just a way to get your beer to clear faster, so just be a bit more patient.
I don't cold crash & I leave my wort to cool naturally. Why waste energy when it's so expensive?

In my opinion, the forced cooling is only important if you are trying to copy a beer style that requires it and you have added a lot of expensive specialised ingredients that you can't afford to risk (like stupid amounts of hops in these trendy yank style beers)

Cheers jof, I appreciate the info!

I'm trying to switch from cider to ale partly to reduce my booze intake, so something like 2.5% to 3.8% is the goal.
 
I found a nice table online not that long ago that showed specific gravity, sugar/litre & potential alcohol strength, but I can't find it instantly.

But this website says 1% = 17g/l
So 1kg bag of sugar in say 21l (I think that's 40 pint kit volume) is potentially 2.8%.
But is a "degree" of alcohol equivalent to 1%?

https://www.decanter.com/learn/advice/how-many-grams-of-sugar-do-you-need-to-make-1-alcohol-51644/
Usually these things are easy to search for, but today it seems to think I want all my measurements in ****y American units, not SI or even proper pints & gallons
 

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