What a brilliant and in depth review… you have given me all of the information I required before deciding on my purchase. This looks like a beautiful little gadget. I am very impressed with its simplicity. I have previously messed around with all grain home brewing… and you need a lot of patience to say the least! I do intend on brewing more with my traditional kit, however this little thing looks very fun! You have me sold! Great video! Cheers, Wazman 🍻 Happy Brewing!
Brillant guide. My sister just brought me the kit by driving to switzerland from the uk. Unfortunately I can't get the app in switzerland, but you filled all the blanks in for me. Great down to earth presentation skills. I'm so excited to pour my first brew!
Excellent review and information. How fast do you have to consume the beer after brewing. How long the Pinter last and stay fresh in the fridge? Thank you.
I've never felt the need to do it, so I couldn't honestly give you the full answer... The folks who built the Pinter kit did a blog about it, might answer more questions than I could, but I'd probably recommend joining the Pinter Facebook group and asking there. pinter.co.uk/blogs/news/we-talk-cold-crashing
Do they still make you buy the "fresh presses" at 4 times the cost of a decent quality beer kit in order to keep the warranty? :D Buy something else, this is the worst way a homebrewer can go.
@@gemark1605 Better someone steer them down the right path, rather than getting ripped off by pinter though. My recommendation would be a Fermzilla all rounder. It's a lot cheaper, and better in every way. A much better choice for someone starting homebrewing. Had the Pinter been my introduction, I would not be brewing now, and I would curse the person who recommended the junk. I used to own one, but after 5 unsuccessful brews (mainly due to Pinter telling me it would be ready in 4 days and their being no way to check gravity), but also due to leaks. I chucked mine in the bin. Since then I have probably saved as much as it cost because Fermzilla don't make you buy beer kits at 4 times the price in order to use the fermenter under warranty.
@@CozzyB My all rounder was £55 plus about £50 for a pressure kit. I can brew anything I want in it. And serve directly from the fermenter, which fits easily in the fridge Where do you get £300 from? How much is it for a "10 pint" fresh press? I pay about £20 for 40 pints. How much is a Pinter? Why would anyone buy one? 10 pint in quotes, because realistically, you get 8.
Excellent video, just got my pinter 3 watched your entire video very informative
Thx from Michigan in the USA 🍻
What a brilliant and in depth review… you have given me all of the information I required before deciding on my purchase. This looks like a beautiful little gadget. I am very impressed with its simplicity. I have previously messed around with all grain home brewing… and you need a lot of patience to say the least! I do intend on brewing more with my traditional kit, however this little thing looks very fun! You have me sold! Great video! Cheers, Wazman 🍻 Happy Brewing!
i love the cats...i ordered the pinter 3 and am using it now for the first go
Brillant guide. My sister just brought me the kit by driving to switzerland from the uk. Unfortunately I can't get the app in switzerland, but you filled all the blanks in for me. Great down to earth presentation skills. I'm so excited to pour my first brew!
I think this is something that Jon would really enjoy.
Its cool that you get to do the whole process from start to finish xx
Yeah it's a lot of fun. It does very occasionally go a bit wrong but that's half the fun! Hehe.
Thanks Mark ,I think Carl deffo want one of these now 😂😂xxx
It is fun to have a go with. Especially if it goes right! I did have a couple of fails on the old one but they probably paid for themselves
Cheers 🍻
Excellent review and information. How fast do you have to consume the beer after brewing. How long the Pinter last and stay fresh in the fridge? Thank you.
It's best drunk within 28 days according to Pinter themselves.. Mine is usually tapped and drunk within a weekend!
First time with a Pinter. Loaded the video to learn how to start. 9.49 and lid is off...how?
please explain cold crashing ...joe
I've never felt the need to do it, so I couldn't honestly give you the full answer... The folks who built the Pinter kit did a blog about it, might answer more questions than I could, but I'd probably recommend joining the Pinter Facebook group and asking there.
pinter.co.uk/blogs/news/we-talk-cold-crashing
Do they still make you buy the "fresh presses" at 4 times the cost of a decent quality beer kit in order to keep the warranty? :D Buy something else, this is the worst way a homebrewer can go.
This is the kind of response that'll put people off even attempting home brewing tbh.
@@gemark1605 Better someone steer them down the right path, rather than getting ripped off by pinter though. My recommendation would be a Fermzilla all rounder. It's a lot cheaper, and better in every way. A much better choice for someone starting homebrewing. Had the Pinter been my introduction, I would not be brewing now, and I would curse the person who recommended the junk. I used to own one, but after 5 unsuccessful brews (mainly due to Pinter telling me it would be ready in 4 days and their being no way to check gravity), but also due to leaks. I chucked mine in the bin. Since then I have probably saved as much as it cost because Fermzilla don't make you buy beer kits at 4 times the price in order to use the fermenter under warranty.
@@CozzyB My all rounder was £55 plus about £50 for a pressure kit. I can brew anything I want in it. And serve directly from the fermenter, which fits easily in the fridge Where do you get £300 from? How much is it for a "10 pint" fresh press? I pay about £20 for 40 pints. How much is a Pinter? Why would anyone buy one? 10 pint in quotes, because realistically, you get 8.
Great video but way way too many feline friends!