I realize the above shot is not breath-taking, but it is a good, simple example to teach from.
1) Get a tripod head that can pivot on an X-axis without any Y-axis or Z-axis variation. There are many specialty heads for this purpose and if you’re serious about panoramics, you should get one...I just use my general-purpose Manfrotto 488 CR2.
2) If you are serious about panoramic shots, you will purchase a 20mm lens. I am not serious about them, so I settle for my 24-70 f/2.8 set to 24mm (I used 34mm in the above example...I am not sure why, I suppose I had a brain fart. 20mm is what you strive for).
3) Meter your shot in *manual mode*. I metered off the plants in the front of the house and backed off 2/3 of a stop.
4) Take your first shot a healthy distance to the left of your intended subject. A great deal will be cropped out depending on how many shots your actually take. Continue down the line taking a shot every 2/3 of a frame.
5) Edit your pictures (I didn't bother with PP at all in the above example...even though the shots were taken in RAW and you should always at least sharpen). Take care to edit every shot you take EXACTLY the same as the rest i.e. batch process.
6) Stitch the shots together, I used the software supplied free with Canon DSLR's, "PhotoStitch". This is a very easy to use program that does a fine job in my opinion. While I would likely use Photoshop in a "real panoramic", I like to use the easy Canon utilities for demonstrations as anyone who shoots Canon automatically has the same tools at their disposal right out of the box.
And you’re done! Easy as pie.