I enjoy a challenge and see this as something in which I can make progress.
I have a fair bit of experience with kit beers and wines. I've also in the past successfully brewed up the ingredients for a wide variety of country wines, using recipes found here and there, with ingredients such as fruit, vegetables and flowers.
I like a nice pint of ale and hope that I will be successful cobbling together something that I will enjoy, especially if I can make it for less than 50p a pint.

So far I have happily completed and consumed one very small batch [a gallon - 9x500ml bottles] of All Grain booze. I have another batch conditioning in bottles and a third finishing its ferment in a demijohn. Right now I am consuming ginger ale as I wait, impatiently, for my real ale to be ready.
I used some brew software to look at these three AG ales and their components. It looks like they could do with a tweak or two to improve their character and balance.
I have also entered some clone recipes found online into my software and these too appeared to be unbalanced and not quite 'right'.
Maybe clone isn't the way to go?
So, I messed with the software to create an 'improved' ale. I will soon actually do the brew and see if my experience tallies with what my software suggests. I'm no beer judge but I know what I like.
Is using software to plan in this way something which works out in practice? Or is it very hit and miss?
I have a brown ale and a lighter ale in my cyber brew portfolio. Neither of which I have actally brewed as yet.
Here is the lighter ale. Do you think it will work? It looks good on my software.
I realize this is only a mini-brew but it is about right for experimentation with my set up and of course it could be scaled up if required.
SirJohn - light brown ale
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Batch Size-- 4.5 L
Boil Time--- 1.000 hr
Efficiency-- 72%
OG---------- 1.043 sg
FG---------- 1.009 sg
ABV--------- 4.5%
Bitterness-- 22.4 IBU (Tinseth)
Color------- 17.9 ebc (Morey)
Fermentables
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Name---------------------------------- Type--- Amount----- Mashed-- Late- Yield-- Color
Fawcetts - Maris Otter Pale Malt- Grain-- 850.000 g--- Yes------- No---- 81%--- 5.0 ebc
Fawcetts - Crystal Malt 1---------- Grain-- 100.000 g--- Yes------- No---- 74%--- 120.0 ebc
Wheat, Torrified--------------------- Grain--- 50.000 g--- Yes------- No---- 79%--- 3.9 ebc
Total grain: 1.000 kg-----------
Hops
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Name-----------------Alpha--- Amount--- Use--- Time---------- Form- IBU
Golding - Leyland-- 4.0%--- 10.000 g--- Boil--- 55.000 min--- Leaf- 19.3
Fuggles - Leyland-- 3.5%----- 5.000 g--- Boil--- 10.000 min--- Leaf- 3.1
Miscs
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Name------- Type----- Use--- Amount--- Time
Whirlfloc--- Fining--- Boil--- ¼ tab------ 15.000 min
Yeasts
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Name--------------------------- Type-- Form- Amount- Stage
Danstar - Nottingham-------- Ale---- Dry--- 3g------- Primary
Mash
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Name----------------- Type------ Amount--- Temp------ Target------- Time
Conversion----------- Infusion-- 3.000 L--- 78.426 C-- 66.667 C---- 1 hr
Final Batch Sparge- Infusion--- 4.000 L--- 81.709 C-- 74.000 C---- 15 min
Should I give up and go down the Offy and look for some bottles or cans, even?
Should I give up and take lessons?
Is it even possible at this stage to give up?
