HOMEBREW Digest #3640 Wed 23 May 2001

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	FORUM ON BEER, HOMEBREWING, AND RELATED ISSUES
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Contents:
  smoked weizen (ensmingr)
  CAP Spurment (george fix)
  Re: Re: Re: Hop pellets and the Bazooka screen (james r layton)
  Question re: Fruit Puree: when to add... (leavitdg)
  Re: Experimenting (Joel Plutchak)
  PID/Experiment/Customs (AJ)
  CAP Experiment (Mike.Szwaya)
  Flocculation and shear (Roy Roberts)
  Re: CAP experiment (John Palmer)
  Transporting CO2 cylinders ("Fred Kingston")
  Flocculation and shear/Hbd'ers?/Geometry and "the experiment" (David Harsh)
  Re: Transporting CO2 canisters (Craig MacFarlane)
  wheat malt effeciency / fermentor geometry ("George de Piro")
  Transporting CO2 cylinders ("Michael Maag")
  automatically save HDB-mail to hard disk ("Jeanine Lanen")
  Mr. Alexander's Cap Experiment Nominees... (Pat Babcock)
  First all-grain batch - Stout? (Don Price)
  Fermenter design (craftbrewer)
  GRANDSLAM CAP EVENT !!! ("Bob Sutton")
  Reflections on Life ("Angie and Reif Hammond")
  Re: CAP experiment (Jeff Renner)

* * 2001 AHA NHC - 2001: A Beer Odyssey, Los Angeles, CA * June 20th-23rd See http://www.beerodyssey.com for more * information. * * Beer is our obsession and we're late for therapy! * Send articles for __publication_only__ to post@hbd.org If your e-mail account is being deleted, please unsubscribe first!! To SUBSCRIBE or UNSUBSCRIBE send an e-mail message with the word "subscribe" or "unsubscribe" to request@hbd.org FROM THE E-MAIL ACCOUNT YOU WISH TO HAVE SUBSCRIBED OR UNSUBSCRIBED!!!** IF YOU HAVE SPAM-PROOFED your e-mail address, you cannot subscribe to the digest as we canoot reach you. We will not correct your address for the automation - that's your job. The HBD is a copyrighted document. The compilation is copyright HBD.ORG. Individual postings are copyright by their authors. ASK before reproducing and you'll rarely have trouble. Digest content cannot be reproduced by any means for sale or profit. More information is available by sending the word "info" to req at hbd.org. JANITOR on duty: Pat Babcock and Karl Lutzen (janitor@hbd.org)
---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 01:31:07 -0500 From: ensmingr at twcny.rr.com Subject: smoked weizen Just had a Schlenkerla Smokebeer Weizen (Aecht Schlenkerla Rauchbier - Weizen). Quite impressive. Very mild smokiness nicely complimented by banana esters with no evidence of clove character. Having had their Aecht Schlenkerla Rauchbier - Maerzen/Vienna, I've been wanting to try one of these for a long time, and my local beer store (Party Source, yada) finally got some. Now, how to brew my own?!? I've made many smoked porters using home-smoked malt and using Weyerman beechwood smoked malt, using 20-50% smoked grains. Ray Daniels and Geoffrey Larson ("Smoked Beers", Brewer's Publications) suggest using 6.3 lbs wheat malt and 3.0 lbs Weyerman smoked malt (~17 IBUs, OG 1.052, FG 1.016, Weizen yeast, etc.). This seems like too much smoked malt to me. Seems it would overwhelm the Weizen yeast character in this beer. Anyone out there with experience? Ray? Geoffrey? Cheerio! Peter A. Ensminger Syracuse, NY Life Under the Sun: http://www.yale.edu/yup/lifesun Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 07:27:05 -0400 From: george fix <gjfix at CLEMSON.EDU> Subject: CAP Spurment Hi! There is no doubt that the CAP project is going to be an observational experiment with some selection bias. However, so were the early studies which attempted to understand the relationship between smoking and health. Maybe we may learn some things and maybe not. However, at a minimum the project will be a lot of fun. My experiences are exactly what Rob and Dr.Pivo (thank goodness we are all too bored to say anything more about HSA!) have reported. In this regard I would be keenly interested to hear what Dr. Pivo has to say about todays Pilsner Urquell. According to European friends of mine they have totally rationalized their brewing process including a change to tower fermenters. Is this true? If so what effect has this had? (I live in the part of the country where it will snow in you know where before fresh imports become available!) There have been some exiting experiments done at the ~1/2 barrel level. If had not been so busy I would have quoted these earlier. One is Finn's classic paper "Tank Hydraulics". The exact reference is at home (Laurie and I did quote it in AoBT), and I will post it tomorrow as well as follow up studies that appeared in Brauwelt. This was a small scaled experiment in glass fermenters, where pictures were taken of the circulation patterns during fermentation. Those who appreciate mathematics and nonlinear dynamic systems will love the many Lorenz cells that can form, particularly with tower fermenters. Cheers, George Fix ******************************************************* George J. Fix Phone: 864-656-4562 Professor and Head Department of Mathematical Sciences Clemson University 29634 ******************************************************* Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 07:14:39 -0500 From: james r layton <blutick at juno.com> Subject: Re: Re: Re: Hop pellets and the Bazooka screen In response to my comments about the Bazooka screen and hop pellets, Pat Babcock reports: >I used a "home made" equivalent to the Bazooka, made with mnesh obtained >from our own Wally Meisner on the Home Brew Flea Market. My success has >not been a matter of having part of the screen poking up above the trub >layer, but a matter of available surface area. There is no arguing with success, but my intuition tells me that there is at least a strong possibility for problems here. Picture this: four inches of hop pellet bits, hot break, and Irish moss goo between 10 gallons of barleywine and your kettle drain. Should the flow slow to a trickle or even stop, please think of me :-) Jim Layton Howe, TX Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 09:18:38 -0400 (EDT) From: leavitdg at plattsburgh.edu Subject: Question re: Fruit Puree: when to add... I have been experimenting with some fruit purees...so far an Apricot and a Raspberry Puree. Looking at the short instruction booklet that I received from the local homebrew shop (Ingraham Brew Supply, Plattsburgh, NY) it says to add to the secondary...I have done so twice, ...I let the yeast settle out...then roused in that there was so much trub at the bottom that I thought I might lose some of the fruit flavor (ie , much of the trub, I assumed from the looks of it , was fruit solids), ....Is this what others do? ie when using the puree....? .Darrell Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 09:01:10 -0500 (CDT) From: Joel Plutchak <plutchak at ncsa.uiuc.edu> Subject: Re: Experimenting Time to lob some trub from the fringes... Jan-Willem van Groenigen wrote: >...one might make the argument that brewing is a craft as much as a >science, and good craftmanship develops from exactly the kind of ad-hoc, >unreplicated little experiments that dr. Pivo describes. I daresay most of us would agree with the first part of the above excerpt. The problem with the second comes in when the little, unreplicated ad-hoc experiments are used as the basis for sweeping generalizations and excessive HBD teeth-gnashing. My favorite such episode was when somebody "proved" that beer doesn't skunk (or become light-struck for those unfortunate souls who live in lands without skunks). Glen Pannicke wrote: >As the Doc points out, the key factor is to "split up many ferments of >the same wort". I might also add that the wort should also be aerated >and pitched before splitting as well. This will ensure that there are no >differences before the ferment. After the fermenters are filled, >environmental conditions should be kept identical as well as length of >ferment. [...] That being done, we may more safely assume that most >major variables have been eliminated or have a negligible effect. Dave Harsh wrote: >Essentially, a 1 foot cube would produce the same circulation patterns >as a 10 foot cube. I'm picturing a bunch of different-sized containers with different geometries, and what I'm thinking is that you'll have different fermentation temperature profiles depending on the first order on size and secondarily on geometry (ruling out pathological cases like a 1 square centimeter column several meters high). Wouldn't a smaller fermenter be more prone to stay closer to the ambient temperature, and a larger perhaps retain more heat due to the temperature of the fermentation process? That would surely have an effect on the taste of the finished beer, and wouldn't necessarily be due solely to geometry. I'm not saying geometry doesn't have some effect on fermentation, nor that doing an extremely loosely controlled experiment would be useless. I'd just be cautious about drawing firm conclusions from the results. Jason Henning wrote about the Great Pale Ale Experiment: >I think the most important thing I learned was that 33 brewers >brewing on 33 different systems will brew 33 different beers. That would be my own pre-experiment prediction. ;-) - -- Joel Plutchak Brewing uncontrolledly and irreproducibly in East-central Illinois Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 11:07:43 -0400 From: AJ <ajdel at mindspring.com> Subject: PID/Experiment/Customs A PID controller would definitely be overkill for control of a refrigerator unless it were equipped with a gas bypass valve in which case PID controllers work just fine but I don't think you find too many brewers second hand fridges configured that way. The on/off cycling is the thing that kills compressors so proportional control from a PID controller would be a bad idea unless the cycle time could be set to say 10 minutes. Many PID controllers have bang-bang modes (i.e. output switches on as temp rises above the upper level of a dead band and off and temperature drops below the lower level of the dead band) and this could be used. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * I've seen the discussions of the proposed experiment and am very grateful for the kind words that went with my nomination. But I must have missed some key posts somewhere along the line because I'm not clear on what the nature of the experiment is to be. I know the basic hypothesis is "Fermenter geometry has an effect on beer" but I'm not clear on whether it's cylindroconical versus cylindrical, cone angle, aspect angle, total depth, surface to volume ratio or some combination of these variables which are to be explored. I'm also not sure what the metrics are to be. I have seen apparent attenuation discussed so I assume that's one. I'll poke around in the archives to see if I can pick up on what I've missed but if someone could condense all the discussions to date into a brief statement as to what is being tested against what I expect everyone in the discussion would benefit. * * * * * * * * ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * I'm going to go out on a limb here a bit but I think I remember seeing that the customs service has stopped treating alcohol separately from other goods IOW you can bring in as much booze as you want free of duty as long as it's under $400 and pay a flat 10% duty on anything over $400 up to $1000. A.J. Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 08:19:37 -0700 From: Mike.Szwaya at co.clark.wa.us Subject: CAP Experiment Glen, and others for that matter, made some good points about achieving consistency among brewers. This experiment isn't about comparing gross elements such as hops or mash systems. It's about pretty small differences in beer flavor that may be influenced by fermenter geometry. The fact that this topic is so hotly contested implies, to me at least, that the difference isn't obvious. I don't see too many people at the local brewpub slamming their empty glasses on the bar, exclaiming "Hot DAMN, that was a great conically fermenter beer!!!" (Is conically a word?) I agree with others who've said that the variance in brewers & their systems and methods are going to overshadow any difference in fermenter geometry. Those who participated in the PAE acknowledge that. Doc Pivo (I think) pointed out that splitting a batch is probably the best way to see these differences. A modification to the experiment might be in order where brewers split their own batch into a corny and another fermenter with a significantly different geometry. For example, I could ferment 5 gal. in a corny with it's own H:W ratio and another 5 or 10 in a sankey keg that would have a much different H:W ratio. Assuming all other parameters in my procedure were held constant, the only variable would be fermenter geometry. That way, we could look at the finished products and make an assessment that, on a whole, the beers fermented in the cornys are/are not different than those in other configurations. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mike Szwaya Portland, OR Email: Mike.Szwaya at co.clark.wa.us Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 08:20:17 -0700 (PDT) From: Roy Roberts <psilosome at yahoo.com> Subject: Flocculation and shear Steve A. >> Flocculation is a consequence of yeast metabolic processes. Dave H. >It is also a physical process as a result of fluid shear and >statistics. > It is well accepted that there are biochemical changes on the cellular > surface that enhance flocculation, but shear induces flocculation. > Yeast are just particles in the fluid continuum and behave as such. .. > Higher shear rates cause particle flocculation. Since this starts during > a rapid fermentation, the yeast flocculate and fermentation ends > prematurely. Maybe this is getting too far from the topic but I have some background in this area: I routinely do experiments on adhesion of (mammalian) cells and I use high shear rates (spinner flasks) to *prevent* suspended cells from sticking to each other. Cell adhesion is surprisingly complex and will depend on, as you point out, cell-surface components, and in my experience will also go down with temperature. Roy Roberts NYC Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 08:54:26 -0700 From: John Palmer <jjpalmer at gte.net> Subject: Re: CAP experiment Hi Guys, First of all, let me say Thank You for the nomination to the advisory committee, and secondly, what exactly are we trying to determine here? Glenn P. made several good points, as did Jason Henning. One of my first thoughts was that a CAP is a difficult style of beer to work with to try to isolate fermentor geometry effects on FG. A lot of extraction efficiency and %fermentability variables involvled. If we really want to evaluate geometry, we should probably work from an extract recipe, using say Briess extract or another universally available name brand. We probably want to standardize boiling conditions and duration too... Next, we need to set up the same fermentation conditions, and obviously that is incredibly difficult to do. Even if we all used one Lot of yeast, each of us will have different aeration and nutrient conditions (ie minerals) in our brewing water which will affect performance. And then there will be different amounts of trub carryover to the fermenter, which affects nutrients and CO2 nucleation sites. Then of course there is fermentation temperature, and barometric pressure, which will affect the CO2 level in the fermenter, which affects yeast performance to a degree. Then, on top of all those variables we are trying to correlate fermenter geometry to finishing gravity. Hmmm, sounds like fun! John Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 12:39:51 -0400 From: "Fred Kingston" <Fred at kingstonco.com> Subject: Transporting CO2 cylinders Craig McFarlane asks... > Date: Mon, 21 May 2001 22:02:18 +0000 > From: Craig MacFarlane <craigm at chemconnect.com> > Subject: Transporting CO2 canisters. > > Hello all, > > I'd like to take my latest batch of beer over to my Mom's house, > a five hour drive away. Is it safe to carry a full CO2 canister in > a passenger car? > > Thanks, > Craig Yes... but please leave the valves connected and unprotected in the trunk of your car, so when you do hit that bridge abutment at 100mph, the neck is snapped off and the escaping CO2 makes a boom loud enough to direct the rescue squad to your wreck!!!!!! Question: How did the CO2 cylinder get from the distributor to your house?????? Were there any motor vehicles involved in its' transport????? :) Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 12:56:50 -0400 From: David Harsh <dharsh at fuse.net> Subject: Flocculation and shear/Hbd'ers?/Geometry and "the experiment" Roy Roberts wrote: > I use high shear rates (spinner flasks) to *prevent* suspended cells from > sticking to each other. Cell adhesion is surprisingly complex and will > depend on, as you point out, cell-surface components, and in my experience > will also go down with temperature. Extremely high shear rates do not prevent flocculation, but act by breaking up the flocs that form. Shear-induced flocculation is well studied and flocculation rate does increase with shear. Its been several years since I've used a spinner flask, but as I recall the liquid motion is a lot more violent that what you see in even a fermenting wort. (do I remember correctly on this?) I have no experience with mammalian cells, but it is interesting that the best way to floc and remove yeast cells is by cooling, which is the opposite of mammalian cells, apparently. - ------------- Jan-Willem van Groenigen <groenigen at ucdavis.edu> asks what hbd'ers want: I'd describe hbd'ers as the most anal-retentive advanced hobbyists on the planet. What do we want? Possibly just a good argument at times. ;) Other times our areas of expertise overlap with brewing issues. - ----------- Rob Moline a.k.a. Jethro wrote on geometry effects: > But the good news was that the vessel did finally earn it's > keep....once it was transitioned to a horizontal vessel........where the > static head didn't produce such high pressure on the yeast. Just want to point out that just because static head changed doesn't make it the reason for the differences between the two orientations. Note that I do believe that geometry matters, but I'm less and less willing to believe that we can prove/determine the underlying causes without a lot more data. As possible variables I see: 1. Gas composition in headspace (does O2 have an impact?) 2. Aspect ratio at constant batch volume (is it due to geometry?) 3. Batch volume at constant aspect ratio (necessary as a companion to #2, imho) 4. Headspace pressure at constant volume and aspect ratio (hydrostatic test - arguably the same as #3 but easier to regulate system pressure) 5. Yeast strain Grain bill, water, mashing schedule, aeration, etc. would need to be standardized. One possibility would be to make it a DME brew since the phenomena should be applicable to any style and this would eliminate grain and mash variables. You can count me in on the experiment, but I don't want to brew more CAP. I already have 10 gallons fermenting (in a split batch with different yeasts). Dave Harsh Bloatarian Brewing League Cincinnati, OH Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 17:54:34 +0000 From: Craig MacFarlane <craigm at chemconnect.com> Subject: Re: Transporting CO2 canisters Thanks! I hadn't considered the rocket scenario. I was just thinking that in an accident it might become a big brick flying throughout the car. My truck isn't big enough to store it upright, can I lay it over and secure it, or am I better off packing it tightly in behind the passenger seat of my car? Craig At 01:42 PM 5/22/01 -0400, Michael Maag wrote: >Craig asks: > > Is it safe to carry a full CO2 canister in > >a passenger car? > > The cylinder can be a problem if it rolls or falls over and strikes > something hard with enough force to damage/break off the valve stem. >The cylinders are at about 800 psi, so if the valve breaks off, you >have a CO2 propelled rocket in your car with 800 pounds of thrust. >If you secure the cylinder so it will not roll/fall over, and it is >in an area where it is not likely to be damaged in a minor collision, >it is relatively safe. >Avoid having the CO2 cylinder in the backseat with the kids. >One could open the cylinder, fill the car with CO2, and make you >giddy, then unconcious from lack of oxygen. >Well secured in the trunk is good. > A much safer alternative (put forth in this forum years ago, not by me) > is to pressurize another corny keg to about 30 or 40 psi and use the > pressure to dispense the beer by occasionally hooking it up to the beer > corny for a few seconds. As long as the corny dosn't leak, you will have > plenty of dispensing pressure. >That said, I frequently transport my 5 lb "party size" CO2 cylinder, or >my 20 lb "hunting camp" cylinder, very well secured, in the car. > >Hope this helps, >Mike Maag, Occupational Safety and Health Inspector Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 14:32:31 -0400 From: "George de Piro" <george at evansale.com> Subject: wheat malt effeciency / fermentor geometry Hi all, Jason ponders the low extract efficiency that he obtained from wheat malt. The most common cause of low efficiency is too coarse of a crush. Wheat malt tends to be smaller than barley and needs to be ground with a tighter mill setting. Can this be the case? - ----------------------------------------- The fermentor geometry experiment sounds like fun, but as Glenn wrote: "The only problem is that what I suggest would require a single physical location and one hell of a big brew pot. This sounds like a Big Brew event!" I have the ability to do this sort of thing at the brewery. I can brew up and pitch 11 or 12 bbls of wort and then transfer some of it into different containers and see how they ferment out. Is all this extra work really necessary, though? Jethro sites the example we learned at Siebel (the Saturn 5 fermentor that didn't work until placed on its side). My own experience comparing homebrewing (carboys, over 100 batches) to an 11 bbl system (Unitanks, well over 100 batches) is that it is often tougher to reach lower gravities with Unitanks than at home with carboys. Rousing often helps a lot, most likely by blowing off excess CO2. Of course, yeast strain plays a HUGE role in this, with some yeast not seeming to care a lot about their surroundings. It is pretty well accepted amongst commercial brewers that fermentor geometry does influence beer flavor. Why? All sorts of factors, like temperature gradients, currents, pressure, and CO2 toxicity. When discussing currents and fermentor geometry it is important to remember that fermenting wort is a dynamic system, with the yeast generating heat which is lost to the environment (which affects currents. Forget it if attemperation is used...). CO2 build up is also very important. It is not accurate to look at small fermentors to extrapolate the effects in larger ones, even if they are the same shape and proportions. The take home message: if anybody cares about this enough, I'll do the work. What kinds of small vessels do you want to look at? I have carboys and corny kegs at the brewery. I guess I could use some big pots, too (but don't tell the chef!). Anything else? Have fun! George Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 16:21:40 -0400 From: "Michael Maag" <maagm at rica.net> Subject: Transporting CO2 cylinders Craig asks: > Is it safe to carry a full CO2 canister in >a passenger car? The cylinder can be a problem if it rolls or falls over and strikes something hard with enough force to damage/break off the valve stem. The cylinders are at about 800 psi, so if the valve breaks off, you have a CO2 propelled rocket in your car with 800 pounds of thrust. If you secure the cylinder so it will not roll/fall over, and it is in an area where it is not likely to be damaged in a minor collision, it is relatively safe. Avoid having the CO2 cylinder in the backseat with the kids. One could open the cylinder, fill the car with CO2, and make you giddy, then unconcious from lack of oxygen. Well secured in the trunk is good. A much safer alternative (put forth in this forum years ago, not by me) is to pressurize another corny keg to about 30 or 40 psi and use the pressure to dispense the beer by occasionally hooking it up to the beer corny for a few seconds. As long as the corny dosn't leak, you will have plenty of dispensing pressure. That said, I frequently transport my 5 lb "party size" CO2 cylinder, or my 20 lb "hunting camp" cylinder, very well secured, in the car. Hope this helps, Mike Maag, Occupational Safety and Health Inspector Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 22:44:14 +0200 From: "Jeanine Lanen" <Jeanine.Lanen at home.nl> Subject: automatically save HDB-mail to hard disk I was tired of everytime saving the HBD-mail messages from my Outlook folder to my hard drive manually so I can read them later with HBD-Browser. I solved it by writing a VBA-program that saves messages to the hard drive and deletes the saved items from the Outlook folder. If anybody is interested the code is below. It saves the selected items that have the text Homebrew as the first eight letters to disk and then delete these items from Outlook. Finally it shows a message box with the number of deleted items. The name the file is saved to, is substracted from the subject title. good luck with it, William - ------------------------------------------ Sub SaveHomeBrewDigest() Dim myOlApp As New Outlook.Application Dim myOlExp As Outlook.Explorer Dim myOlSel As Outlook.Selection Dim MsgTxt As String Pad = "G:\Bier\HBD\2001\" Number = 0 Set myOlExp = myOlApp.ActiveExplorer Set myOlSel = myOlExp.Selection For x = 1 To myOlSel.Count If Left(myOlSel.Item(x).Subject, 8) = "Homebrew" Then Number = Number + 1 Naam = Mid(myOlSel.Item(x).Subject, 16, 6) myOlSel.Item(x).SaveAs Pad & Naam & ".txt", olTXT myOlSel.Item(x).Delete End If Next x MsgTxt = "You have saved" & Number & " selected items in " & Pad & Chr(13) & Chr(13) MsgTxt = MsgTxt & "and removed these from Outlook" MsgBox MsgTxt Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 16:05:29 -0400 (EDT) From: Pat Babcock <pbabcock at hbd.org> Subject: Mr. Alexander's Cap Experiment Nominees... Greetings, Beerlings! Take me to your lager... Of course anyone whom Steve "nominated" is welcome to join the experiment; however, there will be no voting one way or the other. We, those participating and designing this experiment will gratefully accept any addition to the collective mind, and any volunteering of services, be it brewing a batch or analyzing materials or procedures. Your participation is encouraged, and will only help to make the experiment more robust. For those who do not wish to be involved, the cap_exp discussion list is publicly archived every evening. Send "index" to cap_exp-request@hbd.org to see what's there. Though you cannot post directly to the list, you're welcome to send any suggestions you may have to it, and your suggestions will be passed through by the list owner at his discretion. Those directly involved in the planning and execution of this experiment can, of course, post@ will. I believe I can speak for everyone involved in the list when I say that it isn't about who is right and who is wrong; it's a matter of determining the effects in our own environment and determining if this is yet another opportunity to exert control on the process. Lots of good thought on both sides of the list "membrane". If you have an interest in the experiment, please feel free to join us! You don't have to brew for it to contribute. - -- - See ya! Pat Babcock in SE Michigan pbabcock at hbd.org Home Brew Digest Janitor janitor@hbd.org HBD Web Site http://hbd.org The Home Brew Page http://hbd.org/pbabcock "The monster's back, isn't it?" - Kim Babcock after I emerged from my yeast lab Saturday Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 18:49:24 -0400 From: Don Price <dprice1 at tampabay.rr.com> Subject: First all-grain batch - Stout? I'll be trying my first all-grain batch over the holiday weekend. Any suggestions for a batch that will relatively tolerant to extraction efficiency problems due to poor temperature control and other assorted problems? I was thinking of going for a Stout since I'll "need"one in a few weeks anyway. I'll be using the dual 5-gallon drink cooler configuration for the hot water tank and mash/lauter tun so I should be able to get pretty close the first time. A couple of Phil's gadgets and some basic instructions and I feel good to go. Any idiot proofing tips gladly accepted. Last but not least, I recently purchased a "turkey fryer" that just happened to be equipped with an 8-gallon stainless steel kettle and rather sturdy looking 150K BTU burner (also SS). Gee, how lucky can a guy get.... Don Return to table of contents
Date: Wed, 23 May 2001 11:09:05 +1000 From: craftbrewer at telstra.easymail.com.au Subject: Fermenter design G'day all / I wondered when the truth would out with all this debate that goes round and round in non-logical circles / It was wisely written / From: "Rob Moline" <jethrogump at home.com> Subject: Vessel Geometry ala Jethro But the good news was that the vessel did finally earn it's keep....once it was transitioned to a horizontal vessel........ where the static head didn't produce such high pressure on the yeast. / Oh heven be praised someone has finally gelled the arugment. / Again, no science here, and certainly no literature references......just banch. Jethro / Too darn right of course / Shout Graham Sanders / oh one wonders why you didn't ask me in the first place. But then again, some can never be told Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 21:35:49 -0400 From: "Bob Sutton" <Bob at homebrew.com> Subject: GRANDSLAM CAP EVENT !!! Boy am I excited... Just a few questions... Will a hydrometer be sufficient, or should I plan to use an absorbence meter. Should I use a pH meter... what about a mass spec... can we use Clinitest determine the fermentation endpoint (hey - I just recalled ANOTHER 'spurment)... can we wear plaid... Shucks, now I've got the excuse to pick up a new freezer. Count me in! - now we'll have 2 datapoints from upstate SC... 3, if the "Brewster" joins in... ;-)) Bob Fruit Fly Brewhaus Yesterdays' Technology Today Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 22:27:46 -0400 From: "Angie and Reif Hammond" <arhammond at mediaone.net> Subject: Reflections on Life Some sobering thoughts on beer... Deep Thought Sometimes when I reflect back on all the beer I drink I feel ashamed. Then I look into the glass and think about the workers in the brewery and all of their hopes and dreams. If I didn't drink this beer, they might be out of work and their dreams would be shattered. Then I say to myself, "It is better that I drink this beer and let their dreams come true than be selfish and worry about my liver." ---by Jack Handy I feel sorry for people who don't drink. When they wake up in the morning, that's as good as they're going to feel all day. --Frank Sinatra The problem with some people is that when they aren't drunk, they're sober. --William Butler Yeats An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools. --Ernest Hemingway Always do sober what you said you'd do drunk. That will teach you to keep your mouth shut. --Ernest Hemingway Time is never wasted when you're wasted all the time. --Catherine Zandonella Abstainer: a weak person who yields to the temptation of denying himself a pleasure. --Ambrose Bierce Reality is an illusion that occurs due to lack of alcohol. --Anonymous Drinking provides a beautiful excuse to pursue the one activity that truly gives me pleasure, hooking up with fat, hairy girls. -- Ross Levy A woman drove me to drink and I didn't even have the decency to thank her. --W.C. Fields What contemptible scoundrel has stolen the cork to my lunch? --W.C. Fields When I read about the evils of drinking, I gave up reading. --Henny Youngman Life is a waste of time, time is a waste of life, so get wasted all of the time and have the time of your life. -- Michelle Mastrolacasa I'd rather have a bottle in front of me, than a frontal lobotomy. --Tom Waits 24 hours in a day, 24 beers in a case. Coincidence? --Stephen Wright When we drink, we get drunk. When we get drunk, we fall asleep. When we fall asleep, we commit no sin. When we commit no sin, we go to heaven. Sooooo, let's all get drunk and go to heaven! -- Brian O'Rourke You can't be a real country unless you have a beer and an airline. It helps if you have some kind of a football team, or some nuclear weapons, but at the very least you need a beer. --Frank Zappa Always remember that I have taken more out of alcohol than alcohol has taken out of me. --Winston Churchill Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy. --Benjamin Franklin If you ever reach total enlightenment while drinking beer, I bet it makes beer shoot out your nose. --Deep Thought, Jack Handy Without question, the greatest invention in the history of mankind is beer. Oh, I grant you that the wheel was also a fine invention, but the wheel does not go nearly as well with pizza. --Dave Barry The problem with the world is that everyone is a few drinks behind. --Humphrey Bogart Why is American beer served cold? So you can distinguish it from urine. --David Moulton Give me a woman who loves beer and I will conquer the world. --Kaiser Wilhelm I would kill everyone in this room for a drop of sweet, tasty beer. --Homer Simpson Not all chemicals are bad. Without chemicals such as hydrogen and oxygen, for example, there would be no way to make water, a vital ingredient in beer. --Dave Barry All right, brain, I don't like you and you don't like me - so let's just do this and I'll get back to killing you with beer. --Homer Simpson Return to table of contents
Date: Tue, 22 May 2001 23:12:09 -0400 From: Jeff Renner <JeffRenner at mediaone.net> Subject: Re: CAP experiment Brewers I got in late last night from Sunshine Challenge in Orlando (more about that later) and am catching up on HBD. I'm flattered to read that my 1995 CAP recipe was nominated for the fermenter geometry experiment (thanks, Pat). I will also be glad to organize a tasting as Dave Houseman asked, although I do not have any facilities for scientific evaluation. Like Jason, Doc P and some others, I am doubtful that the variable of fermenter geometry can be teased out of the rest of the noise, but it sounds like a fun project anyway. Jeff - -- ***Please note new address*** (old one will still work) Jeff Renner in Ann Arbor, Michigan USA, JeffRenner at mediaone.net "One never knows, do one?" Fats Waller, American Musician, 1904-1943 Return to table of contents
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