Okay, not to make fun of you, but the way you spelled beginner makes me think of the school-yard slang for the female genitalia....
Anyway, do you have the equipment necessary to record a CD? How long has your band been together and how many songs do you have written? Are you well rehearsed on the songs you do have written? I would highly suggest that since this is your first foray into album making, record an EP, which would be about 3 - 6 songs. Also realize that without a studio, your recording is NOT going to sound like the albums by established, signed bands that go out on tours and such. There is literally thousands of dollars of equipment necessary to make a professional recording, and I'm willing to bet you don't have the money for that right now. You're going to have to settle for a decent sounding record at best.
Do you know how to use a computer digital recording program, like Sonar (PC) or Digital Performer (MAC)? If you do, that will be a gigantic help. If not, this may take longer than you think. Knowledge of simple mixers will also help and a decent condensor mic for vocals will faithfully reproduce the vocals with accuracy. I recommend the AKG C2000BH for a good beginner condensor mic. American Musical Supply (
http://www.americanmusical.com) sells them for $199.99. Remember that condensors require phantom power, and most midsize mixers come with a phantom power switch. Yamaha's MG Series mixers are good quality and a decent price. You're going to want a mixer that has no less than 6 XLR inputs for mics for recording drums. For snare drums, toms and amps, it's pretty hard to beat the rugged Shure SM57 ($89.99). It can handle very high SPLs and has become a world standard for a reason. For the bass drum, Shure's Beta 52 ($189.99) is badass. For overheads for the cymbals, AKG's C1000S is a decent mic and you can get a pair for $299.97 at American Musical.
Are you starting to notice how expensive recording can get? I hope that helps somewhat, but since you didn't specify too much about your situation, I'm not sure where you stand. Good luck.