How to make beer at home using yeast
Homebrewing has a quiet charm to it. It turns a kitchen corner into a tiny brewery, and ordinary ingredients into something alive, bubbling and changing by the hour. At its heart, beer is a simple transformation: yeast eats sugar, produces alcohol and carbon dioxide, and leaves behind the flavors that make a drink taste bright, malty, bitter or soft depending on how you build it. You do not need a laboratory to make a decent first batch. You need cleanliness, patience and a little respect for the process.
The easiest place to begin is with a basic malt-based beer. This version is beginner-friendly, uses widely available ingredients and gives you a clear sense of how brewing works. The method below is for a small home batch and can be adjusted later as you get comfortable.
Ingredients you will need
For a simple 5-liter batch, gather the following:
• 1.5 to 2 kg malt extract or brewing malt
• 20 to 30 grams hops, depending on how bitter you want the beer
• 1 packet beer yeast, such as ale yeast
• 5 liters clean water
• 100 to 150 grams sugar, if needed for bottle fermentation
• A sanitizing solution for equipment
• Optional: a few grams of coriander, orange peel or spices for flavor
Note: Hops are the small green cone-shaped flowers of the hop plant (Humulus lupulus). They add bitterness and aroma to beer, balancing the sweetness of malt. They are usually available in dried pellet or cone form in brewing stores or online.
You will also need basic equipment: a large pot, a fermentation bucket or food-safe container, a spoon, a strainer, bottles with caps or swing tops, and a funnel. Cleanliness matters as much as the recipe. In brewing, bacteria are not a side story; they are the fastest way to ruin a batch.
How to get malt for homebrewing
If you cannot find brewing malt or malt extract easily, you can either buy it from brewing suppliers or make a simple version at home. Brewing malt extract is widely available through online homebrewing stores, specialty beer ingredient shops or large e-commerce platforms. It is usually sold as liquid malt extract (LME) or dry malt extract (DME), both of which dissolve easily in hot water and are beginner-friendly. For those curious about making malt from scratch, whole barley grains can be soaked in water for about two days until they begin to sprout, then gently dried and lightly roasted in an oven. This process, called malting, activates enzymes in the grain that help convert starch into fermentable sugars during brewing.
Step 1: Clean and sanitize everything
Before anything else, wash all your tools thoroughly. Then sanitize every item that will touch the beer after boiling begins: the pot lid, spoon, fermenter, funnel, bottles and caps. This step is not glamorous, but it is the difference between fresh beer and something sour for the wrong reasons. Yeast should be the star of the show, not wild microbes.
Step 2: Heat the water
Pour about 4 liters of water into a large pot and bring it close to a boil. Do not rush this part. You want enough heat to dissolve the malt and extract flavor, but not such a violent boil that it spills over.
If you are using malt extract, stir it in slowly once the water is hot. If you are using brewing malt, the process may involve steeping grains first, which takes a little more technique. For a beginner, malt extract is easier and more convenient.
Step 3: Add the hops
Once the malt is dissolved, add the hops. Hops are what give beer its balance. They cut through sweetness, add bitterness and bring that familiar aromatic edge people associate with beer.
You can add hops in stages. Add some early in the boil for bitterness, and a smaller amount near the end for aroma. A boil of around 20 to 30 minutes is enough for a simple home batch, though some recipes run longer. Stir occasionally so nothing sticks to the bottom.
Step 5: Transfer to the fermenter
Pour the cooled wort into your sanitised fermentation container. If you have a strainer, use it to catch hop debris and sediment. Add enough clean water to bring the total volume to about 5 litres.
At this point, the liquid may smell sweet, grassy or slightly bitter. That is exactly what you want. Beer has not happened yet, but the foundation is there.
Step 4: Cool the wort
When the boil is done, remove the pot from the heat and cool the liquid as quickly as you can. In brewing, the sugary liquid before fermentation is called wort. It needs to come down to a yeast-safe temperature, usually around room temperature or slightly warmer, before the yeast is added.
You can place the pot in a sink or tub filled with cold water, or let it sit until it cools naturally. Cover it while it cools so airborne dust and germs do not drift in.
Step 6: Add the yeast
Sprinkle the yeast over the surface of the wort or follow the instructions on the packet. Some yeast can be added directly, while other strains benefit from being activated in warm water first. Seal the fermenter with an airlock or cover it loosely so gas can escape without allowing contamination.
Now the real work begins, and it is work you do not do. Yeast wakes up, feeds and multiplies. Over the next several days, you will notice bubbles, foam and movement. That is fermentation in action.
Step 7: Let it ferment
Keep the fermenter in a dark, stable place at a comfortable room temperature. Too much heat can make the beer taste harsh; too little can slow fermentation. Most basic beers ferment in about one to two weeks, though some need longer.
Do not keep opening the lid. Let the yeast work in peace. The less you interfere, the better.
Step 8: Bottle the beer
When bubbling slows and the beer looks clearer, it is time to bottle. Add a small amount of sugar to each bottle, or mix a measured amount into the batch before bottling, so the remaining yeast can create a little carbonation inside the sealed bottles.
Pour carefully, leaving a small space at the top. Cap tightly.
Step 9: Condition and chill
Leave the bottles at room temperature for about one to two weeks.
During this stage, the yeast continues to work quietly inside the sealed bottles, consuming the remaining sugars and producing carbon dioxide. Because the gas cannot escape, it dissolves into the liquid, creating natural carbonation.
This is when the beer becomes fizzy. After that, move them to the fridge. Cold beer tastes cleaner and keeps the carbonation steady.
Step 10: Taste and learn
Open one bottle gently. Pour it into a glass and look at the color, the foam and the aroma.
Take a slow sip and notice the balance of sweetness, bitterness and body, the tiny bubbles rising, and the way the flavours settle across the palate.
The first batch may not be perfect. That is normal. Homebrewing rewards repetition. Each batch teaches you something: how much hops you like, how warm your room gets, how active your yeast is, how clean your process needs to be.
Disclaimer:
This guide is intended for informational and educational purposes only. Beer is an alcoholic beverage, and the production, possession, or consumption of alcohol may be restricted or regulated in certain regions. Readers should ensure they comply with local laws and regulations regarding homebrewing and alcohol consumption. This content is meant for adults of legal drinking age and does not encourage excessive or irresponsible drinking.
Start a Conversation
Post comment