Hey Gallagher,
You can put say 25g of your preferred hops into a coffee plunger of hot water for 15 mins and just add it to the wort.
Or you can get some malt extract (I used to prefer dry extract) and add 100g per litre of water. Use say 500g in 5 litres of water, dissolve it and bring to the boil (careful of boilovers).
Add your hops to the 5 litres and boil for 20 mins. Let cool a bit and add with the rest of the can. To prevent too much hop material in the wort you can buy "hop socks" or strain it after boiling.
Once at fermentation temperature add your yeast as usual.
Be careful with sanitation and don't be scared to splash the wort into the fermenter when it's at room temperature. Yeast love oxygen and it will improve your yeast growth.
IMO the most important part of the process is sanitation and fermentation temperature. If I'm brewing an ale I keep a constant 18*C with a temp regulated fridge.
You can put say 25g of your preferred hops into a coffee plunger of hot water for 15 mins and just add it to the wort.
Or you can get some malt extract (I used to prefer dry extract) and add 100g per litre of water. Use say 500g in 5 litres of water, dissolve it and bring to the boil (careful of boilovers).
Add your hops to the 5 litres and boil for 20 mins. Let cool a bit and add with the rest of the can. To prevent too much hop material in the wort you can buy "hop socks" or strain it after boiling.
Once at fermentation temperature add your yeast as usual.
Be careful with sanitation and don't be scared to splash the wort into the fermenter when it's at room temperature. Yeast love oxygen and it will improve your yeast growth.
IMO the most important part of the process is sanitation and fermentation temperature. If I'm brewing an ale I keep a constant 18*C with a temp regulated fridge.