For the Data-Driven Homebrewer

A Homebrew Journal Built for Serious All-Grain Brewers.

Stop trying to squeeze complex mash steps into tiny pocket journals. Get a proper, bench-ready notebook with dedicated space for water chemistry, exact hop schedules, and precise gravity readings.

A Homebrew Journal Built for Serious Brewers
🍺 Serious about consistency?

The App Trap

Apps like Brewfather are incredible for formulating recipes. But on brew day—when you're dealing with sticky wort, boiling kettles, and messy hands—constantly unlocking a touchscreen is a frustrating hassle.

Sticky smartphone on wet stainless steel table

The Analog Advantage

Use software to design the recipe.
Use paper to brew it.

Keep your tech safe from the splash zone and track real-time, physical brew day metrics on paper that doesn't crash.

Designed for the Details.

Forget generic lined notebooks. Every page is meticulously structured to capture the exact metrics that matter for reproducing your best batches.

Recipe and Mash Log Preview - Analog Homebrew Journal

Recipe & Mash Builder

Dedicated space for grain bills, mineral adjustments, and complex step-mashing schedules to hit your numbers precisely.

Glossary and Cheat Sheet Preview - Homebrewing Reference Guide

Built-in Glossary & Formulas

For beginner to intermediate brewers: A quick reference guide for ABV formulas, IBU/SRM definitions, and water chemistry right where you need it.

Brewing thermometer and hydrometer - Fermentation Tracking Log

Fermentation Tracking

Track pitch temps, daily gravity checks, and specific yeast strains over time to spot fermentation trends easily.

Stop Guessing. Start Brewing Consistently.

Whether you're chasing the perfect hazy IPA or dialing in a classic stout, consistency is the difference between a good batch and a great one.

  • ✔️ Spot fermentation trends easily
  • ✔️ Document exact adjustments for your next batch
  • ✔️ Confidently replicate your award-winning recipes
"This journal is designed to live on the workbench, not in your pocket. Because real brewers need room to write."
— Hands-On Log Collective

Ready to Upgrade Your Brew Day?

Join the brewers who have leveled up their record-keeping. Keep your recipes precise and your phone safe.

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Free printable Homebrew Cheat Sheets bundle PDF preview Free PDF

Brew Day Templates. Free.

Download a high-resolution, printable PDF bundle containing our **All-Grain Brew Day Sheet** and our **Beer Off-Flavor & Troubleshooting Wheel**. Protect your tech, brew with paper.

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Brewing Parameter Stability FAQ

Why is tracking water profile adjustments (Sulfates vs. Chlorides) critical?

Water chemistry is the foundation of beer flavor profiles. The ratio of Sulfates (which highlight hop bitterness and crispness) to Chlorides (which boost malt sweetness and body) defines styles like West Coast IPAs or New England IPAs. Tracking mineral additions on brew day ensures you replicate your mash pH and target flavor profile batch after batch.

Should I measure my mash pH at mash temperature or room temperature?

Mash pH should always be measured at **room temperature (25°C / 77°F)**. Although many modern pH meters have Automatic Temperature Compensation (ATC), this only corrects the electrical response of the electrode, not the chemical properties of the mash itself. Mash pH changes chemically by about 0.06 pH units per 10°C, so cooling your sample is necessary for accurate, standardized readings.

Do I really need a pH meter or is a software calculator enough?

Brewing software estimates mash pH based on average mineral inputs, but malts vary by batch, crop year, and kiln profile. A physical logbook bridges this gap, allowing you to record real-world measurements next to your calculations to find out exactly why a batch didn't hit its target attenuation or why astringency occurred.

How does mash pH affect the final beer quality and taste?

Hitting the ideal mash pH range (5.2–5.6 at room temperature) ensures optimal enzyme activity for converting starches to fermentable sugars. If your mash pH climbs above 5.8, it extracts harsh polyphenols (tannins) from the grain husks, resulting in permanent astringency (a dry, puckering sensation). Too low of a pH leads to poor yeast health and low fermentation attenuation.

How do I calculate Alcohol by Volume (ABV) from gravity readings?

ABV is calculated using gravity measurements taken before fermentation (Original Gravity) and after (Final Gravity). The standard formula is: ABV = (OG - FG) * 131.25. Logging these gravity readings physically alongside your temperature checks lets you analyze yeast attenuation and style compliance reliably offline.

How does a physical brew day logbook prevent recipe errors compared to apps?

Brew day is chaotic, involving hot liquids, boiling kettles, and sticky wort. Unlocking a smartphone or tablet screen with sticky fingers is a major source of friction. A physical paper logbook acts as a sacrificial layer: it's cheap to replace if damaged, keeps your $1000 smartphone clean on the workbench, and offers immediate offline data recording.

Can I track step mashing, whirlpool additions, and dry hopping in this log book?

Yes. The pages are designed by and for all-grain brewers. They feature dedicated sections for multi-step infusion mashing (temperatures and durations), water chemistry calculations, detailed hop addition schedules (First Wort, Boil, Whirlpool, and Dry Hopping), and fermentation tracking metrics (Original Gravity, Final Gravity, temperature logs, and yeast attenuation).