OK so you want to brew kits. For starters, only buy Coopers or Morgans (now 100% owned by Coopers anyway) or Muntons kits (English and expensive) the rest are crap.
Would advise you to wait till March or so—brewing outside a fridge in hot weather gives you lots of Vegemite flavor (literally, Vegemite is made from spent brewers yeast. . .)
Buy a tin of the Coopers Australian Bitter and a tin of the Coopers light liquid malt extract, and buy a packet of Safale 04 ale yeast. Stand both tins in a small plastic basin, pour
≈ 2L boiling water in and let the tins stand for 10-15 minutes. This softens the syrup and makes it more pourable (with honey I put the bucket in the microwave for 3-4 minutes but can’t do that with tins!) Keep your yeast in the fridge until you start the softening process, then take it out to let it come to room temperature.
While tins are standing in the hot water clean and sanitise your fermenter (see my brew manual on-line (
http://www.jovialmonk.com.au/chapter1.htm) then pour in the the contents of the two tins and follow that with 4L boiling water (the instructions on the tin might say 2L but you are adding 2 tins of syrup.) Stir the syrup/water mix well for a few minutes. Now we need to add cold water and it makes a difference how you add it: use a 2L jug and fill to the line then pour the water from the jug into the fermenter from as big a height as you can manage, plenty of splashing meaning tons of aeration and plenty of oxygen in the wort (unfermented beer is called wort pronounced as ‘wurt’ when topped up to the right level cut the packet of yeast open and carefully sprinkle the yeast on to the top of the froth so the yeast forms a thin, even layer over the whole of the froth. Fit lid and airlock, let it ferment and (if weather isn’t too hot) leave it undisturbed in your fermenter for two weeks.
This part should not take more than 20 minutes.
You will need to take a hydrometer reading to ensure the ferment is finished (don’t want no exploding bottles!) but we can talk about that later.
You will have a golden colored beer that will not be too bitter for you and will have a good flavor, mouthfeel and body. For variety you could try the amber malt and even the wheat malt with the Australian Bitter. Depends if you like wheat beers, I do but to some people they taste like catpiss.
If you want to get started right the fuck now I recommend the Coopers Irish Stout with the amber liquid malt, dark and roasty enough to override the Vegemite flavor
You will have enough different kit + malt combinations to keep you happy for a long time. If sometime you want to boost the hop aroma/flavor a bit we can talk about hop teas then.
This is the best advice you can get—I have read about all the brew books there are, have tasted customers beers, often a pleasure sometimes not and have won gold medals with my beers.