Brewing

Brewing is how potions and splash potions are made in Minecraft.

General Guide to Brewing
The player needs to craft a Brewing Stand and right-click on it to display the brewing interface. In the single space at the top, a reagent can be placed to distill into the bottom 3 spaces that can hold any combination of potion and/or water bottles. A brewing process starts when the top space and at least one of the bottom 3 spaces are filled, and is indicated by the column of bubbles to the left animating. At the same time, the brewing progress is indicated by how much the arrow bar on the right fills up. When the bar is full, the brewing process is complete. The reagent is consumed, and the contents of the glass bottles(s) will change depending on the reagent brewed into them. A single reagent can affect up to three potions or bottles on the bottom, so it is more efficient to fill all three slots before brewing.

As long as at least one of the three bottom spaces is filled, the brewing will continue, and additional bottles of water or potion can be added. However, if the reagent is removed, or the bottom 3 slots are emptied at any time during the process, the process will stop and nothing will have been brewed.

All Chemical Components
All chemical components are supplies used to make potions. All except for the Cauldron are necessary for brewing.

Reagents
Reagents are used in conjunction with the above components to produce a whole array of potions and splash potions.

Base Reagents
Base reagents are necessary to create potions and some base reagents can affect the duration and/or intensity of a potion when added later in the brewing cycle.

Secondary Ingredients
Secondary reagents imbue an Awkward Potion with a particular effect and do not affect potion duration or intensity. When brewed with a Water Bottle, any of these reagents will produce a Mundane Potion.

Tertiary Reagents
Tertiary reagents are reagents that create negative tertiary potions when followed by a Fermented Spider Eye.

Primary
All primary potions are created by brewing a single reagent with a Water Bottle. Mundane Potion and Potion of Weakness can be combined with Gunpowder to create their throwable Splash Potion counterparts.

Secondary
Secondary potions are created by brewing a reagent with a primary potion and can be combined with Gunpowder to create their throwable Splash Potion counterparts.

Tertiary
Tertiary potions are created by brewing a reagent with a secondary potion or another tertiary potion and can be combined with Gunpowder to create their throwable Splash Potion counterparts.

Recipes
Despite the complicated web of potions that can be brewed from other potions, to brew a specific potion from the water bottle most efficiently the options are quite simple. The following table gives the most efficient way to brew each potion without wasting extra ingredients. Cases where the order of ingredients is irrelevant or two different ingredients are interchangeable are included. The potion of weakness, the only one which can be brewed without starting with a nether wart, can still be brewed from an awkward potion if the player wishes to convert all water bottles to awkward potions in preparation for brewing.

Weakness > fermented spider eye  Weakness E > fermented spider eye and redstone (if brewed from an awkward potion the fermented spider eye must be added first)   Strength > nether wart > blaze powder   Strength E > nether wart > blaze powder > redstone   Strength II > nether wart > blaze powder > glowstone   Regeneration > nether wart > ghast tear   Regeneration E > nether wart > ghast tear > redstone   Regeneration II > nether wart > ghast tear > glowstone   Swiftness > nether wart > sugar   Swiftness E > nether wart > sugar > redstone   Swiftness II > nether wart > sugar > glowstone   Slowness > nether wart > sugar or magma cream > fermented spider eye   Slowness E > nether wart > sugar or magma cream > fermented spider eye > redstone   Health > nether wart > glistering melon   Health II > nether wart > glistering melon > glowstone   Harming > nether wart > glistering melon or spider eye > fermented spider eye   Harming II > nether wart > glistering melon or spider eye > fermented spider eye and glowstone   Poison > nether wart > spider eye   Poison E > nether wart > spider eye > redstone   Poison II > nether wart > spider eye > glowstone   Fire Resistance > nether wart > magma cream   Fire Resistance E > nether wart > magma cream > redstone

History
Initially, the Cauldron was where potions were brewed. Code in Beta 1.9 pre2 revealed that Potions were brewed by adding water to the Cauldron followed by certain reagents. Correctly combined reagents would confer purely beneficial potion effects, and incorrect combinations added negative effects. The system was complicated, lacked a GUI, and formed many duplicate potions (i.e. two potions that were exactly the same could be made in several different ways), so Notch and Jeb came up with a new brewing method using a Brewing Stand. The Cauldron's role in brewing was relegated to being a slightly more efficient storage vessel for water. Brewing was greatly streamlined and simplified when a brewing GUI was added and most duplicate potions were removed (the total possible potions went down from 150 combinations to only 25 different potions in 31 combinations). However, this new system made some potion effects available in earlier 1.9 pre-releases inaccessible (e.g. Nausea, Blindness and Invisibility).

Throwable Splash Potions were introduced in Beta 1.9 Pre4 and brewed by placing gunpowder and any potion together in a brewing stand. This pre-release also introduced Glistering Melon as an alchemical reagent to replace the instant health effect conferred by the Ghast Tear, which then added the effect of regeneration instead. This version also converted certain reagents into base-secondary reagents (the Spider Eye, Glistering Melon and Blaze Powder made Mundane Potion when brewed into a water bottle in addition to their previous functions), bringing the potion total to 28 different potions in 35 combinations.

Potion type history
Based on information found in minecraft.jar/lang/en_US.lang, the current potion types from Minecraft 1.0.0 are listed below:


 * Potion of Swiftness
 * Potion of Slowness
 * Potion of Strength
 * Potion of Weakness
 * Potion of Healing
 * Potion of Harming
 * Potion of Regeneration
 * Potion of Fire Resistance
 * Potion of Poison

Due to changes in the brewing system, the following potions are currently not  accessible:


 * Potion of Haste
 * Potion of Dullness
 * Potion of Leaping
 * Potion of Nausea
 * Potion of Resistance
 * Potion of Water Breathing
 * Potion of Invisibility
 * Potion of Blindness
 * Potion of Night Vision
 * Potion of Hunger

Trivia

 * Only 1 ingredient is needed to brew into up to 3 potions. These three potions do not necessarily have to be the same.
 * Upgrading effect of potion that has no time parameter (i.e. Instant Health, Harming) with glowstone dust has no downsides.
 * Upgrading a Fire Resistance Potion with redstone dust has no downsides.
 * Although Jeb said that in the 1.9 pre-release 3 there were 161 possible different potion combinations with 2,653 in the future, in the actual third pre-release only 22 different potions could be made without the use of external programs. Of those, 19 potions had one of 8 different effects.
 * The Mundane Potion made from redstone has a different metadata (64) than the mundane potion made from any other ingredient (8192). Unlike Mundane 64, Mundane 8192 can be made into a Splash Mundane Potion by adding gunpowder that is, like its base potion, without any effect.
 * There are many Potions that were left behind from 1.9 pre-releases that fill up different metadatas that otherwise cannot be brewed or obtained without a SMP server command or inventory editor. These potions include but are not limited to: Bungling Potion, Buttering Potion, Debonair Potion, Refined Potion.
 * Splash potions can be fired by Dispensers.
 * Cauldrons can be entirely circumvented from the brewing process with no ill effects, as bottles can be filled by right-clicking on a water source block. This is an improvement from cauldrons, as one does not have to replenish the source block every three bottles, or indeed at all. This, however can not be done in the Nether, where cauldrons become essential.
 * Some splash potions have the opposite effect on undead mobs such as zombies and skeletons.