Design Our Next Homebrew Kits!

Want To Be Part Of Designing Muntons’ Next Homebrew Kits?

Of Course You Can-Can!

 

Muntons, a global manufacturer and supplier of brewing and distilling malts and malted ingredients, has kicked off a competition to design the next range in its craft homebrewing kit portfolio.

Due to launch in 2022, the Suffolk based maltster is developing a new range of single-can homebrew kits with a contemporary twist and is welcoming those with a creative flair, to design the labels to be used on each of the cans.

Exclusively manufactured by Muntons, these single-can craft beer kits will be unique to the market, with the winning designers being featured on the labels and receiving £500 each.

Muntons, which turns 100 this September, will provide participants who enter the competition with an artwork template, brand guidelines and support from the Muntons Marketing team.

Launching the competition, Senior Marketing Manager at Muntons, Andrew Leedham, said: “Earlier this year, we received tremendous feedback when we sampled our Muntons Flagship range with 25 homebrewers. This helped us to perfect the kits prior to them hitting the shelves back in June. We love how this range has been created with the support of our fellow homebrewers; it gives our range such a personal vibe. That’s why we’re asking for beer-lovers to help us design the label for our next kits. It keeps that community spirit going.

“This is a great opportunity for those who’ve just started their creative careers and amateur designers. We’re excited to see these entries!”

To be in with a chance of designing a label and receiving £500, please send examples of your previous design work to Competition@muntons.com by Tuesday 31 August. All entrants must be 18 years or over. For more information, please get in contact on social media or email.

Milk Day - 0% Milk Stout

It's World Milk Day!

And we have our Alcohol-free Milk Stout Recipe... - 0% Milk Stout!

Made from a dilution of Muntons Alcohol free Malt Extract at 4.3KG/HL as the base.
We then added 1KG of Roasted malt extract for colour and roast flavour as well as some coffee beans, lactose and cocoa nibs.

The dilution was then boiled and a CO2 hop extract was added for a mild bittering.

Filtered and bottled after the boiled the wort was chilled.

Let us know of any interest for our Premium Alcohol Free Malt Extract here.

Muntons Crop Report May 2021

The grain team at our headquarters in Stowmarket has reviewed the current crop situation and released the following report.

 

To view full crop report Click Here

Learning at Work Week 2021 – Learning on the Job with Homebrew

Andrew Leedham, our Senior Marketing Manager, joined Muntons in September 2020. With a love for beer (as well as golf and chocolate), Andrew was more than happy to roll his sleeves up and learn more about our homebrew kits, all in the name of work!

So, as part of Learning at Work Week, we asked Andrew to put together his own beginners’ guide to home brewing.

Let’s look at the equipment we need to make our own beer:

Early watch-out; sanitise!

As a new homebrewer, I could *not* wait to get sanitisation out of the way and start putting the ingredients together. Don’t fall into this trap! Homebrewing is a science with live yeast feeding off its environment, so poor sanitisation will lead to off flavours, smells and potentially an infected wort. None of which makes for the perfect pint.

To avoid any contamination, ensure that you sterilise all the equipment before using it. The most efficient way to do this:

Now you’re ready to get brewing!

For my first kit, I brewed a Geordie Bitter on the advice of my colleagues; a relatively simple brewing process that consistently delivers outstanding quality homebrewed beer.

For your first few attempts at homebrewing, follow the ingredients and instructions to the letter. The flavour is packed within the malt extract and therefore you will want to get every drop out of the can.

Here are my top tips:

Mixing the ingredients:

Don’t disregard the importance of this step. If the ingredients aren’t mixed properly, it will affect the flavour of your homebrew:

Fermentation:

Patience is key; always go by the hydrometer and don’t rush! Kits will ferment quickly if kept at the constant optimum temperature. For the typical homebrewer creating the magic in their kitchen or garage, this is not always possible. Your kit will come with an original gravity and final gravity figure in the instructions.

It’s important that you don’t start bottling until it has reached the final gravity.

Bottling & conditioning:

You’re nearly there, but there are still important tasks to do, including more sanitising! You’ve come this far, so don’t get caught out now; make sure you sanitise:

Cheers!

Now enjoy your home brewed beer!

It's Water Saving Week

When making malt extract, our evaporation process generates significant volumes of liquid condensate. To be as efficient as possible, we collect this in our water tanks and reuse it where it is most useful. Whenever our buffer tanks reach capacity, we then divert the condensate to our wastewater treatment plant (WWTP).
However, by working closely with our engineers and WWTP team, we have been able to reduce the amount of diversion by 80,000 litres a day; which equates to roughly 160 families' daily water usage. This avoids the need to heat a volume of water that is not required in the process and gives us the capacity to expand production in other areas that require the AD plant processing step. Footage was taken by Eclipse Aerial Photography