Czech Craft Beer & Home Brewing

Brew Better Beer at Home

Honest, practical guides built on brewing science and hands-on experience. Whether you're mashing your first grain or dialling in a Czech-style pilsner, this is where you start.

Home brewing ingredients and equipment laid out for an IPA brew day Grain to Glass
3
In-Depth Guides
4
Brew Steps
700+
Years Czech Tradition
Saaz
Iconic Czech Hop

Everything You Need to Brew

Three focused guides covering the full arc of home brewing — from understanding ingredients to setting up your first proper brewery corner.

Wort boiling in a homebrew kettle Beginner

Start Here • 8 min read

Brewing Basics: Your First All-Grain Batch

From mashing grain to pitching yeast — a step-by-step walkthrough of the brewing process with timing, temperatures, and what to watch for.

Read Guide
Carapils malt grains held in hand Ingredients

Ingredients • 7 min read

Malt & Hops: Choosing the Right Varieties

Base malts, crystal malts, roasted grains. Noble hops versus New World varieties. Understanding these choices shapes every flavour in your glass.

Read Guide
Home brewing set with fermentation containers Equipment

Setup • 6 min read

Equipment Guide: What You Actually Need

Cut through the noise. This guide separates the essential from the optional — and explains why beginners often buy the wrong things first.

Read Guide

Brew Day in Four Steps

A simplified look at what actually happens on a typical 20-litre all-grain brew day at home.

1

Mill & Mash

Crush your grain and steep it in hot water for 60 minutes to extract fermentable sugars.

2

Boil & Hop

Bring the wort to a rolling boil, add hops at timed intervals for bitterness and aroma.

3

Cool & Pitch

Chill wort rapidly to fermentation temperature, then add your chosen yeast strain.

4

Ferment & Package

Allow 1–3 weeks for fermentation, then bottle or keg with priming sugar for carbonation.

About BrewCraft Guide

This site is written by brewing enthusiasts who have been fermenting things in Czech kitchens and garages since the early 2010s. Every guide is based on actual brew days, failed batches, and lessons learned the hard way. We cite established brewing science — Palmer's How to Brew, the BJCP Style Guidelines, and peer-reviewed fermentation research — because craft deserves accuracy.

About the Project