I bottled the Bewitched Red Ale tonight after 18 days of fermentation. The wort seemed to continue to evolve in taste and color, so I waited to bottle until I had a couple of consecutive days where the flavor and clarity seemed consistent.
I added some items to my equipment inventory for this go 'round. The more research I have done, the more I have found that most brewers use a different sanitizer than the one that ships with Mr. Beer. I suppose this happens out of necessity, because once you stop buying the kits from Mr. Beer you need to find a new method of sanitizing the equipment.

I chose StarSan for this task, which seems to be far and away the leading home brew sanitizer. Just like the Mr. Beer sanitizer, this is a no-rinse chemical sanitizer. It is a liquid concentrate, and a little goes a long way: you mix 1 oz to 5 gallons of water. It is much faster than the oxygen-based cleaner, as it only needs 1 minute of contact (instead of 10) to sanitize a surface. The best part is that once you make the solution, you can continue to use it for a couple of batches. I bought this bottle for $7, and it will most likely last me a year or more of constant brewing.
Since I bought the new sanitizer, I needed to buy something to hold the solution. I bought an 11-gallon plastic bucket with handles. It is flexible and easy to maneuver, and as luck would have it, my sink accommodates it perfectly. I figured that if I ever get to the point where I am making 5 gallon batches of beer, this will do the trick.


I made a 2.5 gallon batch of StarSan this time, and this turned out to be just about right. I put about half of my new 16 oz. bottles in the solution, waited for a minute, then drained them and left them to dry while I put the other half in. Each time I had the bottles soaking, I also put in the other equipment I'd need to sanitize (bottling wand, caps, funnel, etc.)


I had brought out my Little Brown Keg about 2 hours earlier in hopes that any solids that were agitated by the movement would settle by the time I started bottling. After everything had dried, I attached the wand and added the priming sugar to the bottles and started filling. The wand has a spring-loaded valve on the end that allows you to fill the bottles from the bottom to avoid any aeration. Not much faster, but helps you avoid contaminating the beer.
I put the wand in the first bottle and immediately noticed lots of solids going through the wand. This batch had never really cleared up like the West Coast Pale Ale had, but I wasn't expecting that on the first bottle. Each subsequent bottle cleared up a little, and by the middle of the process I was getting what I expected.
The final bottle also had a lot of particulate matter go in from the keg. I marked these two bottles as the ones I'll try first during carbonation testing. Interestingly, I only got 15 bottles out of this batch. However, I taste-tested this batch non stop for the past week, sometimes twice per day. I probably drank 16 oz. worth over the 18 days it was in the fermenter.

I put all the bottles back into the box they were shipped in to further protect them from light. I'll leave them there for at least two weeks again. Now I have two batches in the pipeline, either in warm conditioning or in the fridge. Either way, that means I have an open fermenter! I already have plans to do something about that.
My little brewery inventory is growing! My next batch will go into the fermenter before the weekend. I am going to brew a Mr. Beer booster kit with some additional ingredients I bought from the home brew shop. Stay tuned....