Brupaks?

The Homebrew Forum

Help Support The Homebrew Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

John C

New Member
Joined
Jan 31, 2018
Messages
11
Reaction score
2
I've come into an old 'Brupak' Belgian witbier kit which is a few years out of date (BBE Oct 2012). Before I bin it, is there any chance it would still be any good? I assume the yeast sachet is a goner. There's also a sachet of herbs etc.
 
Is the extract in a can? Tinned goods practically can't go off unless the tin is damaged. So if the tin is in good condition, in theory it should be fine. The yeast might be, but you're better off with a fresh one, and the herbs will probably be in no fit state to flavour anything.
 
Last edited:
I have a BBE 2012 Coopers larger can sat in the shed. I've bought some new yeast and going to give it a go, just for the craic. Will do a little review on here once I get round to knocking it up.

To summarise the answers I got when asking on here if it was any good:
- Do it
- Don't do it
 
Is the extract in a can? Tinned goods practically can't go off unless the tin is damaged. So if the tin is in good condition, in theory it should be fine. The yeast might be, but you're better off with a fresh one, and the herbs will probably be in no fit state to flavour anything.
Yes the extract is in a can which is why I was wondering whether the BBE date referred to the yeast etc. I shall give it a go at some point perhaps once we've left the EU and the Belgians can no longer get me.
 
The date applies to the tin too, but you can ignore them relatively safely. Tinned food is sealed inside the tin, and then cooked in the tin at very high temperatures. This kills all the germs in the tin, and as it's a sealed environment no new ones can get in. However, manufacturers have to account for the very low chance that some pathogens survived the heat, hence tins have a sell by date.

Like I said, though, providing the tin remains undamaged and airtight they practically last forever. I should, in the interests of fairness, point out that some brewers swear LME does go off and causes homebrew twang, but given the way the canning process works I don't believe that can be a factor. I'd use it if I were you.
 
"Use By" dates need to be observed, a "Best Before" date is just someone else's opinion.
 
Lovely. I'll keep it and give it a go when I'm a bit more confident / proficient. Thanks for the advice!
 
My first brew last year was a tin of wilko lager with a 2011 date on it - brewed up fine and tasted perfectly normal.
 
Could do an experiment ... Buying a tin a year of the same make kit and saving them for say 10 years, and then brewing all 10 and seeing if there was any difference in flavour. A pretty boring experiment mind, but still...
 
My granddaughter bought me a kit from a car boot. About 4 years out of date, from memory, and paid about 10p. Replaced the yeast and brewed it. No problem with the final beer.
 
OK folks, I'm going to try and get this baby on the go. I'm looking at the home-brew-supplies-uk website which has some yeast - Wyeast Activator™ 3944 Belgian White Beer Yeast - MFG Oct 2018
and some
[URL='https://www.home-brew-supplies-uk.co.uk/brewing-grains/curacao-bitter-orange-peel-cut-100g.html']Curacao Bitter Orange peel - Cut 100g
[/URL]
What sort of bag am I looking for? A 'straining', 'hop' or a 'fruit press' bag? I have some coriander seeds already - where's the best place to find simple instructions on what I need to do? Should I toast/roast these seeds before using?

PS is anyone local to Tadcaster able to lend me a 29 mm capper (of the portable variety naturally) My remaining stack of bottles is Hoegaarden ones. Will travel to collect / return, obvs.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top