Hi Damn,
Welcome to the forum.
I think doing an APA is a great idea for inexperienced brewers and it's really pretty easy. The hops will give you plenty of flavour and aroma and should help to cover any imperfections and "kit twang".
I just opened my first bottle of my AG Fat Yak (version 2) recipe last night and it is still a bit young (only 1 week in the bottle) but its going to be great
.
I only did 4 kit and kilo/ kits and bits brews before I moved to AG 2 years ago. My first three brews were Aussie and belgian lagers and were very average, but for my last kits and bits brew I did an APA with a 10min stove top boil for the hops and it turned out fantastic. This brew was what insired me to learn more and try AG brewing. I'm hooked now and I haven't looked back since.
Here is the method I used and should give you something pretty similar (not an extact clone) to Fat Yak and be very drinkable.
- 1 x Can Coopers Pale Ale
- 1kg LDME
- 20g Cascade hops
- 20g Nelson Sauvin hops
- 1 x Packet US05 yeast (throw away the kit yeast)
Boil 4L of water in a pot on the stove and disolve 400g of the LDME in it
Add 10g Cascade and 10g Nelson Sauvin and boil for 10mins
At the end of the 10min boil turn the heat off and add another 10g of Cascade and 10g Nelson Sauvin and leave for 2mins
Pour the contents of the pot through a sieve and into your fermenter
Pour the contents of the Coopers tin (sit the tin in a some hot water for 5-10mins prior to soften it and make it easier to get the contents out) into the fermenter along with the remaining 600g of LDME and give it a stir to dissolve everything.
Once dissolved fill the fermenter with 20L of cold tap water take a SG reading and seal the fermenter
When the temperature of the fermenter contents has dropped to 20C sprinkle in the yeast and give the wort a good stir to aerate it then re-seal the fermenter and ferment at 18-20C
I usually leave my brews in the fermenter for 2-3weeks then bottle.
I hope that this is useful.
Cheers
Simon